Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


US9993205B2 - Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows - Google Patents

Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US9993205B2
US9993205B2US12/818,066US81806610AUS9993205B2US 9993205 B2US9993205 B2US 9993205B2US 81806610 AUS81806610 AUS 81806610AUS 9993205 B2US9993205 B2US 9993205B2
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cardiac
pacing
response
capture
classification
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Active, expires
Application number
US12/818,066
Other versions
US20100256703A1 (en
Inventor
Scott A. Meyer
Yanting Dong
Jeremy Maniak
Doug Birholz
John Voegele
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Cardiac Pacemakers Inc
Original Assignee
Cardiac Pacemakers Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Cardiac Pacemakers IncfiledCriticalCardiac Pacemakers Inc
Priority to US12/818,066priorityCriticalpatent/US9993205B2/en
Publication of US20100256703A1publicationCriticalpatent/US20100256703A1/en
Priority to US15/970,573prioritypatent/US10898142B2/en
Application grantedgrantedCritical
Publication of US9993205B2publicationCriticalpatent/US9993205B2/en
Activelegal-statusCriticalCurrent
Adjusted expirationlegal-statusCritical

Links

Images

Classifications

Definitions

Landscapes

Abstract

Methods and devices for classifying a cardiac response to pacing involve establishing a retriggerable cardiac response classification window. A first cardiac response classification window is established subsequent to delivery of a pacing pulse. A cardiac signal following the pacing stimulation is sensed in the first classification window. A second cardiac response classification may be triggered if a trigger characteristic is detected in the first classification window. The cardiac signal is sensed in the second classification window if the second classification window is established. The cardiac response to the pacing stimulation is determined based on characteristics of the cardiac signal. The cardiac response may be determined to be one of a captured response, a non-captured response, a non-captured response added to an intrinsic beat, and a fusion/pseudofusion beat, for example.

Description

RELATED PATENT DOCUMENTS
This patent application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/734,599 filed on Dec. 12, 2003, to which priority is claimed under 35 U.S.C. §120, and which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to implantable medical devices and, more particularly, to classifying a cardiac response following delivery of a pace pulse.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
When functioning normally, the heart produces rhythmic contractions and is capable of pumping blood throughout the body. However, due to disease or injury, the heart rhythm may become irregular resulting in diminished pumping efficiency. Arrhythmia is a general term used to describe heart rhythm irregularities arising from a variety of physical conditions and disease processes. Cardiac rhythm management systems, such as implantable pacemakers and cardiac defibrillators, have been used as an effective treatment for patients with serious arrhythmias. These systems typically comprise circuitry to sense electrical signals from the heart and a pulse generator for delivering electrical stimulation pulses to the heart. Leads extending into the patient's heart are connected to electrodes that contact the myocardium for sensing the heart's electrical signals and for delivering stimulation pulses to the heart in accordance with various therapies for treating the arrhythmias.
Cardiac rhythm management systems operate to stimulate the heart tissue adjacent to the electrodes to produce a contraction of the tissue. Pacemakers are cardiac rhythm management systems that deliver a series of low energy pace pulses timed to assist the heart in producing a contractile rhythm that maintains cardiac pumping efficiency. Pace pulses may be intermittent or continuous, depending on the needs of the patient. There exist a number of categories of pacemaker devices, with various modes for sensing and pacing one or more heart chambers.
When a pace pulse produces a contraction in the heart tissue, the electrical cardiac signal preceding the contraction is denoted the captured response (CR). The captured response may include an electrical signal, denoted the evoked response signal, associated with the heart contraction, along with a superimposed signal associated with residual post pace polarization at the electrode-tissue interface. The magnitude of the residual post pace polarization signal, or pacing artifact, may be affected by a variety of factors including lead polarization, after-potential from the pace pulse, lead impedance, patient impedance, pace pulse width, and pace pulse amplitude, for example.
A pace pulse must exceed a minimum energy value, or capture threshold, to produce a contraction. It is desirable for a pace pulse to have sufficient energy to stimulate capture of the heart without expending energy significantly in excess of the capture threshold. Thus, accurate determination of the capture threshold is required for efficient pace energy management. If the pace pulse energy is too low, the pace pulses may not reliably produce a contractile response in the heart and may result in ineffective pacing. If the pace pulse energy is too high, the patient may experience discomfort and the battery life of the device will be shorter.
Capture detection allows the cardiac rhythm management system to adjust the energy level of pace pulses to correspond to the optimum energy expenditure that reliably produces a contraction. Further, capture detection allows the cardiac rhythm management system to initiate a back-up pulse at a higher energy level whenever a pace pulse does not produce a contraction.
At times, a pacing pulse may merge with an intrinsic beat, producing a fusion beat. A fusion beat is a cardiac contraction that occurs when two cardiac depolarizations of a particular chamber, but from separate initiation sites, merge. When the heart is being paced, a fusion beat occurs when two cardiac depolarizations of a particular chamber, but from separate sites, merge. Fusion beats, as seen on electrocardiographic recordings, exhibit various morphologies. The merging depolarizations of a fusion beat do not contribute evenly to the total depolarization.
Pseudofusion occurs when a pacing stimulus is delivered on a spontaneous P wave during atrial pacing or on a spontaneous QRS complex during ventricular pacing. In pseudofusion, the pacing stimulus may be ineffective because the tissue around the electrode has already spontaneously depolarized and is in its refractory period.
During normal pacing, fusion/pseudofusion beats may be of little consequence except for wasted energy due to the generation of unnecessary pace pulses. However, discrimination between a fusion/pseudofusion beat and a captured response may be required during an automatic capture or threshold determination procedures. Fusion/pseudofusion beats may cause false detection of capture and may lead to erroneous capture threshold values and/or erroneous automatic capture verification information.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention involves various methods and devices for classifying cardiac responses to pacing stimulation. In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a method of classifying a cardiac response to a pacing stimulation involves delivering a pacing stimulation to a heart and establishing a first classification window subsequent to delivery of the pacing stimulation. A cardiac signal is sensed in the first classification window. A second classification window is established if a trigger characteristic of the cardiac signal is detected in the first classification window. The cardiac signal is sensed in the second classification window if the second classification window is triggered. The cardiac response to the pacing stimulation is classified based on one or more characteristics of the cardiac signal.
In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, a medical device includes a pulse delivery system and a sensing system. The pulse delivery system is configured to deliver a pacing stimulation to a heart. The sensing system is configured to a sense cardiac signal following delivery of the pacing stimulation. The medical device further includes a control system, coupled to the sensing system. The control system is configured to establish a first classification window subsequent to delivery of the pacing stimulation. The control system establishes a second classification window if a trigger characteristic of the cardiac signal is detected in the first classification window. The cardiac response to the pacing stimulation is classified by the control system based on one or more characteristics of the sensed cardiac signal.
The above summary of the present invention is not intended to describe each embodiment or every implementation of the present invention. Advantages and attainments, together with a more complete understanding of the invention, will become apparent and appreciated by referring to the following detailed description and claims taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a partial view of one embodiment of an implantable medical device in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 2A is a block diagram of an implantable medical device that may be used to classify a cardiac response to pacing in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 2B is a schematic diagram of a circuit that may be used to generate pacing stimulations in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 2C is a schematic diagram of a circuit that may be used to sense a cardiac signal following the delivery of a pacing stimulation and to classify the cardiac response to the pacing stimulation according to embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 3 is a graph of a cardiac signal that indicates consistent capture;
FIG. 4A depicts superimposed graphs of captured responses, non-captured responses, and fusion/pseudofusion beats in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 4B depicts superimposed graphs comparing an early intrinsic beat and a captured response in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 4C illustrates superimposed graphs of a captured response and a non-captured response in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 5 is a graph illustrating a cardiac signal sensed on a right ventricular (RV) shock channel vector following a pacing pulse delivered on a rate channel in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 6 is a flowchart illustrating a method of classifying a cardiac response to pacing using retriggerable classification windows in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 7 is a flowchart illustrating a method of triggering multiple cardiac response classification windows in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a retriggerable cardiac response classification window in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 9 illustrates cardiac signals indicative of a variety of cardiac pacing responses and their relation to the cardiac response classification windows in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 10 is a flowchart illustrating a method of classifying a cardiac response to pacing using capture detection regions defined in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 11 is a diagram illustrating cardiac response classification windows and capture detection regions in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 12 is a diagram illustrating positions of cardiac signal peaks in relation to the first and second capture detection regions for various cardiac responses in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIGS. 13A and 13B illustrate a flowchart of a method of cardiac response classification including intrinsic response classification in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 14 is a diagram illustrating cardiac response classification windows, capture detection windows, and an intrinsic detection window used to classify a cardiac response to pacing in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 15 illustrates a flowchart of a method of initializing detection regions in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 16A shows peak locations of five cardiac signal waveforms representing a captured response in accordance with embodiments of the invention;
FIG. 16B illustrates an averaged coordinate location of the cardiac signal peaks detected in the first cardiac response classification window in accordance with embodiments of the invention; and
FIGS. 17A-17D are diagrams illustrating adjustment of a detection region in accordance with embodiments of the invention.
While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail below. It is to be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the invention is intended to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF VARIOUS EMBODIMENTS
In the following description of the illustrated embodiments, references are made to the accompanying drawings forming a part hereof, and in which are shown by way of illustration, various embodiments by which the invention may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized, and structural and functional changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Embodiments of the invention are directed methods and systems for classifying the cardiac response following the delivery of pacing stimulation to the heart. In accordance with various aspects of the invention, cardiac response classification may be implemented by defining one or more retriggerable classification windows relative to and following a pacing stimulation.
In one approach, a first cardiac response classification window is established subsequent to a pacing pulse. A cardiac signal following the pacing stimulation is sensed in the first classification window. A second cardiac response classification is triggered if a trigger characteristic is detected in the first classification window. The cardiac response to the pacing stimulation is determined based on the one or more detected characteristics and the particular classification windows in which the one or more characteristics are detected. The cardiac response may be determined to be one of a captured response, a non-captured response, a non-captured response added to an intrinsic beat, and a fusion/pseudofusion beat, for example.
In another approach, multiple cardiac response classification windows may be triggered by characteristics of the cardiac signal. In one implementation, multiple classification windows may be triggered to allow the system to acquire additional information before classifying the cardiac response. In another implementation, additional classification windows may be triggered if non-capture is detected and a back up pace is delivered. In this situation, additional classification windows may be triggered to classify the cardiac response to the back up pace.
Various embodiments of the invention involve using the same electrode combination for pacing and sensing. Other embodiments involve using an electrode combination for pacing that is different from the electrode combination used for sensing the cardiac response to pacing. Employing different electrode combinations for pacing and sensing reduces the effect of the pacing artifact in the captured response signal.
By way of example, the processes of the present invention may be used to enhance capture threshold testing to determine the optimal energy for pacing. Determination of the optimal pacing energy may be implemented, for example, by an automatic capture threshold testing procedure executed by an implantable cardiac rhythm management system. Additionally, automatic capture verification may be used to monitor pacing on a beat-by-beat basis. Automatic capture verification may be used to control back up pacing when a pace pulse delivered to the heart fails to evoke a captured response (CR). These and other applications may be enhanced by employment of the systems and methods of the present invention.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that reference to a capture threshold procedure indicates a method of determining the capture threshold in one of the left atrium, the right atrium, the left ventricle, and the right ventricle. In such a procedure, the pacemaker, automatically or upon command, initiates a search for the capture threshold of the selected heart chamber or chambers. The capture threshold is defined as the lowest pacing energy that consistently produces a contraction of the heart chamber.
In one example of an automatic capture threshold procedure, the pacemaker delivers a sequence of pacing pulses to the heart and detects the cardiac responses to the pace pulses. The energy of the pacing pulses may be decreased in discrete steps until a predetermined number of loss-of-capture events occur. After the predetermined number of loss-of-capture events occur, the pacemaker may increase the stimulation energy in discrete steps until a predetermined number of capture events occur to confirm the capture threshold. A capture threshold test may be performed using cardiac response classification methods of the present invention.
Other procedures for implementing capture threshold testing may be utilized. In one example, the pacing energy may be increased in discrete steps until capture is detected. In another example, the pacing energy may be adjusted according to a binomial search pattern.
Automatic capture threshold determination is distinguishable from automatic capture detection, a procedure that may occur on a beat-by-beat basis during pacing. Automatic capture detection verifies that a delivered pace pulse results in a captured response. When a captured response is not detected following a pace pulse, the pacemaker may deliver a back up safety pace to ensure consistent pacing. The back up pace may be delivered, for example, about 90-110 ms after the initial pace pulse. If a predetermined number of pace pulses delivered during normal pacing do not produce a captured response, the pacemaker may initiate a capture threshold test to determine the capture threshold. Automatic capture detection and back up pacing may be implemented using the cardiac response classification processes of the present invention.
The embodiments of the present system illustrated herein are generally described as being implemented in an implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD) that may operate in numerous pacing modes known in the art. Various types of single and multiple chamber implantable cardiac defibrillators are known in the art and may be used in connection with the cardiac response classification methods of the present invention. The methods of the present invention may also be implemented a variety of implantable or patient-external cardiac rhythm management devices, including single and multi chamber pacemakers, defibrillators, cardioverters, bi-ventricular pacemakers, cardiac resynchronizers, and cardiac monitoring systems, for example.
Although the present system is described in conjunction with an implantable cardiac defibrillator having a microprocessor-based architecture, it will be understood that the implantable cardiac defibrillator (or other device) may be implemented in any logic-based integrated circuit architecture, if desired.
Referring now toFIG. 1 of the drawings, there is shown a cardiac rhythm management system that may be used to implement cardiac response classification methods of the present invention. The cardiac rhythm management system inFIG. 1 includes anICD100 electrically and physically coupled to alead system102. The housing and/or header of theICD100 may incorporate one ormore electrodes208,209 used to provide electrical stimulation energy to the heart and to sense cardiac electrical activity. TheICD100 may utilize all or a portion of the ICD housing as acan electrode209. TheICD100 may include an indifferent electrode positioned, for example, on the header or the housing of theICD100. If theICD100 includes both a can electrode209 and anindifferent electrode208, theelectrodes208,209 typically are electrically isolated from each other.
Thelead system102 is used to detect electric cardiac signals produced by theheart101 and to provide electrical energy to theheart101 under certain predetermined conditions to treat cardiac arrhythmias. Thelead system102 may include one or more electrodes used for pacing, sensing, and/or defibrillation. In the embodiment shown inFIG. 1, thelead system102 includes an intracardiac right ventricular (RV)lead system104, an intracardiac right atrial (RA)lead system105, an intracardiac left ventricular (LV)lead system106, and an extracardiac left atrial (LA)lead system108. Thelead system102 ofFIG. 1 illustrates one embodiment that may be used in connection with the cardiac response classification methodologies described herein. Other leads and/or electrodes may additionally or alternatively be used.
Thelead system102 may include intracardiac leads104,105,106 implanted in a human body with portions of the intracardiac leads104,105,106 inserted into aheart101. The intracardiac leads104,105,106 include various electrodes positionable within the heart for sensing electrical activity of the heart and for delivering electrical stimulation energy to the heart, for example, pacing pulses and/or defibrillation shocks to treat various arrhythmias of the heart.
As illustrated inFIG. 1, thelead system102 may include one or more extracardiac leads108 having electrodes, e.g., epicardial electrodes, positioned at locations outside the heart for sensing and pacing one or more heart chambers.
The rightventricular lead system104 illustrated inFIG. 1 includes an SVC-coil116, an RV-coil114, an RV-ring electrode111, and an RV-tip electrode112. The rightventricular lead system104 extends through theright atrium120 and into theright ventricle119. In particular, the RV-tip electrode112, RV-ring electrode111, and RV-coil electrode114 are positioned at appropriate locations within theright ventricle119 for sensing and delivering electrical stimulation pulses to the heart. The SVC-coil116 is positioned at an appropriate location within theright atrium chamber120 of theheart101 or a major vein leading to the rightatrial chamber120 of theheart101.
In one configuration, the RV-tip electrode112 referenced to thecan electrode209 may be used to implement unipolar pacing and/or sensing in theright ventricle119. Bipolar pacing and/or sensing in the right ventricle may be implemented using the RV-tip112 and RV-ring111 electrodes. In yet another configuration, the RV-ring111 electrode may optionally be omitted, and bipolar pacing and/or sensing may be accomplished using the RV-tip electrode112 and the RV-coil114, for example. The rightventricular lead system104 may be configured as an integrated bipolar pace/shock lead. The RV-coil114 and the SVC-coil116 are defibrillation electrodes.
Theleft ventricular lead106 includes an LVdistal electrode113 and an LVproximal electrode117 located at appropriate locations in or about theleft ventricle124 for pacing and/or sensing theleft ventricle124. Theleft ventricular lead106 may be guided into theright atrium120 of the heart via the superior vena cava. From theright atrium120, theleft ventricular lead106 may be deployed into the coronary sinus ostium, the opening of thecoronary sinus150. Thelead106 may be guided through thecoronary sinus150 to a coronary vein of theleft ventricle124. This vein is used as an access pathway for leads to reach the surfaces of theleft ventricle124 which are not directly accessible from the right side of the heart. Lead placement for theleft ventricular lead106 may be achieved via subclavian vein access and a preformed guiding catheter for insertion of theLV electrodes113,117 adjacent to the left ventricle.
Unipolar pacing and/or sensing in the left ventricle may be implemented, for example, using the LV distal electrode referenced to thecan electrode209. The LVdistal electrode113 and the LVproximal electrode117 may be used together as bipolar sense and/or pace electrodes for the left ventricle. Theleft ventricular lead106 and theright ventricular lead104, in conjunction with theICD100, may be used to provide cardiac resynchronization therapy such that the ventricles of the heart are paced substantially simultaneously, or in phased sequence, to provide enhanced cardiac pumping efficiency for patients suffering from chronic heart failure.
The rightatrial lead105 includes a RA-tip electrode156 and an RA-ring electrode154 positioned at appropriate locations in theright atrium120 for sensing and pacing theright atrium120. In one configuration, the RA-tip156 referenced to thecan electrode209, for example, may be used to provide unipolar pacing and/or sensing in theright atrium120. In another configuration, the RA-tip electrode156 and the RA-ring electrode154 may be used to effect bipolar pacing and/or sensing.
FIG. 1 illustrates one embodiment of a leftatrial lead system108. In this example, the leftatrial lead108 is implemented as an extracardiac lead with LA distal118 and LA proximal115 electrodes positioned at appropriate locations outside theheart101 for sensing and pacing theleft atrium122. Unipolar pacing and/or sensing of the left atrium may be accomplished, for example, using the LAdistal electrode118 to thecan209 pacing vector. The LA proximal115 and LA distal118 electrodes may be used together to implement bipolar pacing and/or sensing of theleft atrium122.
Referring now toFIG. 2A, there is shown an embodiment of acardiac defibrillator200 suitable for implementing a cardiac response classification methodology of the present invention.FIG. 2A shows a cardiac defibrillator divided into functional blocks. It is understood by those skilled in the art that there exist many possible configurations in which these functional blocks can be arranged. The example depicted inFIG. 2A is one possible functional arrangement. Other arrangements are also possible. For example, more, fewer or different functional blocks may be used to describe a cardiac defibrillator suitable for implementing the cardiac response classification methodology of the present invention. In addition, although thecardiac defibrillator200 depicted inFIG. 2 contemplates the use of a programmable microprocessor-based logic circuit, other circuit implementations may be utilized.
Thecardiac defibrillator200 depicted inFIG. 2 includes circuitry for receiving cardiac signals from a heart and delivering electrical stimulation energy to the heart in the form of pacing pulses or defibrillation shocks. In one embodiment, the circuitry of thecardiac defibrillator200 is encased and hermetically sealed in ahousing201 suitable for implanting in a human body. Power to thecardiac defibrillator200 is supplied by anelectrochemical battery280. A connector block (not shown) is attached to thehousing201 of thecardiac defibrillator200 to allow for the physical and electrical attachment of the lead system conductors to the circuitry of thecardiac defibrillator200.
Thecardiac defibrillator200 may be a programmable microprocessor-based system, including acontrol system220 and amemory270. Thememory270 may store parameters for various pacing, defibrillation, and sensing modes, along with other parameters. Further, thememory270 may store data indicative of cardiac signals received by other components of thecardiac defibrillator200. Thememory270 may be used, for example, for storing historical EGM and therapy data. The historical data storage may include, for example, data obtained from long term patient monitoring used for trending or other diagnostic purposes. Historical data, as well as other information, may be transmitted to anexternal programmer unit290 as needed or desired.
Thecontrol system220 andmemory270 may cooperate with other components of thecardiac defibrillator200 to control the operations of thecardiac defibrillator200. The control system depicted inFIG. 2 incorporates a cardiacresponse classification processor225 for classifying cardiac responses to pacing stimulation in accordance with various embodiments of the present invention. Thecontrol system220 may include additional functional components including apacemaker control circuit222, anarrhythmia detector221, and atemplate processor224 for cardiac signal morphology analysis, along with other components for controlling the operations of thecardiac defibrillator200.
Telemetry circuitry260 may be implemented to provide communications between thecardiac defibrillator200 and anexternal programmer unit290. In one embodiment, thetelemetry circuitry260 and theprogrammer unit290 communicate using a wire loop antenna and a radio frequency telemetric link, as is known in the art, to receive and transmit signals and data between theprogrammer unit290 and thetelemetry circuitry260. In this manner, programming commands and other information may be transferred to thecontrol system220 of thecardiac defibrillator200 from theprogrammer unit290 during and after implant. In addition, stored cardiac data pertaining to capture threshold, capture detection and/or cardiac response classification, for example, along with other data, may be transferred to theprogrammer unit290 from thecardiac defibrillator200.
In the embodiment of thecardiac defibrillator200 illustrated inFIG. 2, electrodes RA-tip156, RA-ring154, RV-tip112, RV-ring111, RV-coil114, SVC-coil116, LVdistal electrode113, LVproximal electrode117, LAdistal electrode118, LAproximal electrode115,indifferent electrode208, and can electrode209 are coupled through aswitch matrix210 to sensing circuits231-237.
A rightatrial sensing circuit231 serves to detect and amplify electrical signals from the right atrium of the heart. Bipolar sensing in the right atrium may be implemented, for example, by sensing voltages developed between the RA-tip156 and the RA-ring154. Unipolar sensing may be implemented, for example, by sensing voltages developed between the RA-tip156 and thecan electrode209. Outputs from the right atrial sensing circuit are coupled to thecontrol system220.
A rightventricular sensing circuit232 serves to detect and amplify electrical signals from the right ventricle of the heart. The rightventricular sensing circuit232 may include, for example, a rightventricular rate channel233 and a rightventricular shock channel234. Right ventricular cardiac signals sensed through use of the RV-tip112 electrode are right ventricular near-field signals and are denoted RV rate channel signals. A bipolar RV rate channel signal may be sensed as a voltage developed between the RV-tip112 and the RV-ring111. Alternatively, bipolar sensing in the right ventricle may be implemented using the RV-tip electrode112 and the RV-coil114. Unipolar rate channel sensing in the right ventricle may be implemented, for example, by sensing voltages developed between the RV-tip112 and thecan electrode209.
Right ventricular cardiac signals sensed through use of the RV-coil electrode114 are far-field signals, also referred to as RV morphology or RV shock channel signals. More particularly, a right ventricular shock channel signal may be detected as a voltage developed between the RV-coil114 and the SVC-coil116. A right ventricular shock channel signal may also be detected as a voltage developed between the RV-coil114 and thecan electrode209. In another configuration thecan electrode209 and the SVC-coil electrode116 may be electrically shorted and a RV shock channel signal may be detected as the voltage developed between the RV-coil114 and thecan electrode209/SVC-coil116 combination.
Outputs from the rightventricular sensing circuit232 are coupled to thecontrol system220. In one embodiment of the invention, rate channel signals and shock channel signals may be used to develop morphology templates for analyzing cardiac signals. In this embodiment, rate channel signals and shock channel signals may be transferred from the rightventricular sensing circuit232 to thecontrol system220 and to atemplate processor224 where the morphological characteristics of a cardiac signal are analyzed. Thetemplate processor224 works in combination with thecontrol system220 and thememory270 to generate and maintain various types of templates, including, for example, templates used for arrhythmia discrimination as well as cardiac response classification as described in more detail below.
Left atrial cardiac signals may be sensed through the use of one or more leftatrial electrodes115,118, which may be configured as epicardial electrodes. A leftatrial sensing circuit235 serves to detect and amplify electrical signals from the left atrium of the heart. Bipolar sensing and/or pacing in the left atrium may be implemented, for example, using the LAdistal electrode118 and the LAproximal electrode115. Unipolar sensing and/or pacing of the left atrium may be accomplished, for example, using the LAdistal electrode118 tocan vector209 or the LAproximal electrode115 tocan vector209.
A leftventricular sensing circuit236 serves to detect and amplify electrical signals from the left ventricle of the heart. Bipolar sensing in the left ventricle may be implemented, for example, by sensing voltages developed between the LVdistal electrode113 and the LVproximal electrode117. Unipolar sensing may be implemented, for example, by sensing voltages developed between the LVdistal electrode113 or the LVproximal electrode117 to thecan electrode209.
Optionally, an LV coil electrode (not shown) may be inserted into the patient's cardiac vasculature, e.g., the coronary sinus, adjacent the left heart. Signals detected using combinations of the LV electrodes,113,117, LV coil electrode (not shown), and/or canelectrodes209 may be sensed and amplified by the leftventricular sensing circuitry236. The output of the leftventricular sensing circuit236 is coupled to thecontrol system220.
The outputs of the switchingmatrix210 may be operated to couple selected combinations ofelectrodes111,112,113,114,115,116,117,118,156,154 to an evokedresponse sensing circuit237. The evokedresponse sensing circuit237 serves to sense and amplify voltages developed using various combinations of electrodes for cardiac response classification in accordance with embodiments of the invention.
In the embodiments described below, various combinations of pacing and sensing electrodes may be utilized in connection with pacing and sensing the cardiac signal following the pace pulse to classify the cardiac response to the pacing pulse. For example, in some embodiments, a first electrode combination is used for pacing a heart chamber and a second electrode combination is used to sense the cardiac signal following pacing. In other embodiments, the same electrode combination is used for pacing and sensing.
Sensing the cardiac signal following a pacing pulse using the same electrode combination for both pacing and sensing may yield a sensed cardiac signal including a pacing artifact component associated with residual post pace polarization at the electrode-tissue interface. The pacing artifact component may be superimposed on a smaller signal indicative of the cardiac response to the pacing pulse, i.e., the evoked response. The pacing output circuitry may include a coupling capacitor to block DC components from the heart and to condition the pacing stimulus pulse. A relatively large coupling capacitor may cause a larger pacing artifact that decays exponentially over a relatively large period of time.
The presence of a large pacing artifact signal may complicate the classification of the cardiac response to pacing. Various embodiments of the invention are directed to methods involving detection of a cardiac signal following pacing and canceling the pacing artifact from the detected signal. Classification of the cardiac response to pacing may be implemented using the pacing artifact cancelled signal. Cancellation of the pacing artifact in cardiac response classification is particularly important when the same or similar electrode combinations are used both for delivering pacing pulses and for sensing the cardiac signals following the delivery of the pacing pulses. Cancellation of the pacing artifact may also be used when a first electrode combination is used for pacing the heart chamber and a different electrode combination is used to sense the subsequent cardiac response. Methods and systems for pacing artifact cancellation are described in commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/335,534, filed Dec. 31, 2002, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
In various embodiments described herein a first electrode combination may be used for pacing the heart chamber and a second electrode combination used for sensing the cardiac signals following the pace for cardiac response classification. If different electrode combinations are used for pacing and sensing, a temporal separation between the cardiac response signal, e.g., the evoked response, and the pacing artifact may facilitate classification of the cardiac response to pacing. The temporal separation occurs due to the propagation delay of the depolarization wavefront initiated at the pacing electrode and traveling to a sensing electrode that is physically spaced apart from the pacing electrode. The temporal separation of the cardiac response signal and the pacing artifact may be sufficient to obviate cancellation of the pacing artifact. Use of different electrodes for pacing and sensing in connection with capture verification is described in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,535 which is incorporated herein by reference.
Thepacemaker control circuit222, in combination with pacing circuitry for the left atrium, right atrium, left ventricle, andright ventricle241,242,243,244, may be implemented to selectively generate and deliver pacing pulses to the heart using various electrode combinations. The pacing electrode combinations may be used to effect bipolar or unipolar pacing of the heart chambers as described above
As described above, bipolar or unipolar pacing pulses may be delivered to a heart chamber using one of the pacing vectors as described above. The electrical signal following the delivery of the pacing pulses may be sensed through various sensing vectors coupled through theswitch matrix210 to the evokedresponse sensing circuit237 and used to classify the cardiac response to pacing.
In one example, the cardiac signal following the pacing pulse may be sensed using the same vector as was used for delivery of the pacing pulse. In this scenario, the pacing artifact may be canceled from the sensed cardiac signal using the pacing artifact cancellation techniques described below. Following cancellation of the pacing artifact, retriggerable classification windows may be defined following the pacing pulse and used to classify the cardiac response to pacing. The cardiac response may be classified as one of a captured response, a non-captured response, a non-captured response and an intrinsic beat, and a fusion/pseudofusion beat, for example.
In another example, the vector used to sense the cardiac signal following the pacing pulse may be different from the vector that was used to deliver the pacing pulse. The sensing vector may be selected to minimize the pacing artifact. Cancellation of the pacing artifact may not be necessary if the pacing artifact is sufficiently minimized using this technique.
In various embodiments, the pacing vector may be a near-field vector and the sensing vector may be a far-field vector. In an example of right ventricular pacing and cardiac response sensing, the pacing vector may be the rate channel vector and the sensing vector may be the shock channel vector. Cardiac response classification may be accomplished, for example, using retriggerable classification windows defined following delivery of the pacing pulse as described in greater detail below.
Possible sensing vectors for effecting cardiac response classification may include, for example, RV-tip112 and RV-coil114, RV-coil114 and LV distal electrode113, RV coil114 and LV proximal electrode117, RV-coil114 and can209, RV-coil114 and SVC coil116, RV-coil114 and SVC coil116 tied and the can209, RV-coil114 and A-ring154, RV-coil114 and A-tip156, LV distal electrode113 and LV proximal electrode117, LV distal electrode113 and can209, LV distal electrode113 and SVC coil116, LV distal electrode113 and A-ring154, LV distal electrode113 and A-tip156, LV proximal electrode117 and can209, LV proximal electrode117 and SVC coil116, LV proximal electrode117 and A-ring154, LV proximal electrode117 and RA-tip156, SVC coil116 and can209, RA-ring154 and can209, RA-tip156 and can209, SVC coil116 and A-ring154, SVC coil116 and A-tip156, RA-ring154 and RA-tip156, RA-ring154 and can209, RA-tip156 and RV-coil114, RA-ring154 and RV-coil114, RA-tip156 and RV-tip112, RA-ring154 and RV-tip112, RV-tip112 and can209, RV-ring111 and can209, LV distal electrode113 and RV-coil114, LV proximal electrode117 and RV-coil114, LV distal electrode113 and RV-ring111, and LV distal electrode113 and RV-ring111. This list is not exhaustive and other sensing vector combinations may be developed to implement cardiac response classification in accordance with embodiments of the invention. For example, other combinations may include a coronary sinus electrode, an indifferent electrode, a leadless ECG electrode, cardiac epicardial electrodes, subcutaneous electrodes, and/or other electrodes.
Approaches for using leadless ECG electrodes for capture detection are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,222,493, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Subcutaneous electrodes may provide additional sensing vectors useable for cardiac response classification. In one implementation, cardiac rhythm management system may involve a hybrid system including an intracardiac device configured to pace the heart and an extracardiac device, e.g., a subcutaneous defibrillator, configured to perform functions other than pacing. The extracardiac device may be employed to detect and classify cardiac response to pacing based on signals sensed using subcutaneous electrode arrays. The extracardiac and intracardiac devices may operate cooperatively with communication between the devices occurring over a wireless link, for example. Examples of subcutaneous electrode systems and devices are described in commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/462,001, filed Jun. 13, 2003 and 10/465,520, filed Jun. 19, 2003, which are incorporated herein by reference in their respective entireties.
For right ventricular pacing, bipolar pacing may be delivered using the RV-tip electrode112 and the RV-ring electrode111. Unipolar pacing may be delivered using the RV-tip112 to can209 vector. The preferred sensing electrode combinations for cardiac response classification following RV pacing include RV-coil114 to SVC-coil116 tied to thecan electrode209, RV-coil114 to can electrode209, and, if the system includes an left ventricular lead, LVdistal electrode113 to LVproximal electrode117.
In an example of left ventricular pacing, bipolar pacing pulses may be delivered to the left ventricle between the LVdistal electrode113 and the LVproximal electrode117. In another example, unipolar pacing pulses may be delivered to the left ventricle, for example, between the LVdistal electrode113 and thecan209. The cardiac signal following the delivery of the pacing pulses may preferably be sensed using the LVproximal electrode117 and thecan209.
In an example of right atrial pacing, bipolar pacing pulses may be delivered to the right atrium between the RA-tip electrode156 and the RA-ring electrode154. In another example, unipolar pacing pulses may be delivered to the right atrium, for example, between the RA-tip electrode156 and thecan electrode209. For unipolar right atrial pacing, the preferred electrode combination for sensing cardiac signals following pacing for cardiac response classification comprises the RA-ring154 to indifferent electrode.
In an example of left atrial pacing, bipolar pacing pulses may be delivered to the left atrium between the LAdistal electrode118 and the LAproximal electrode115. In another example, unipolar pacing pulses may be delivered to the left atrium, for example, between the LAdistal electrode118 and thecan electrode209. The cardiac signal following the delivery of the pacing pulses and used for cardiac response classification may preferably be sensed using the RA-tip156 to RA-ring154 vector.
In one embodiment of the invention, a switchingmatrix210 is coupled to the RA-tip156, RA-ring154, RV-tip112, RV-coil114, LVdistal electrode113, LVproximal electrode117,SVC coil116, LAdistal electrode118, LAproximal electrode115, indifferent, and can209 electrodes. The switchingmatrix210 may be arranged to provide connections to various configurations of pacing and defibrillation electrodes. The outputs of the switchingmatrix210 are coupled to an evoked response (ER)sensing circuit237 that serves to sense and amplify cardiac signals detected between the selected combinations of electrodes. The detected signals are coupled through theER amplifier237 to a cardiacresponse classification processor225. The cardiacresponse classification processor225 includes circuitry configured to classify a cardiac response to a pacing stimulation, including, for example, classifying a captured response, a non-captured response, an intrinsic beat added to a non-captured response, and a fusion/pseudofusion response, in accordance with the invention.
FIGS. 2B and 2C illustrate more detailed examples of pacing and sensing circuitry, respectively, that may be used for cardiac pace/sense channels of a pacemaker in accordance with embodiments of the invention. It will be appreciated that the example pacing and sensing circuits illustrated inFIGS. 2B and 2C may be arranged to achieve the pacing and sensing vectors described above.
In example embodiments of the invention, the pacing circuit ofFIG. 2B includes a power supply orbattery261, afirst switch262, asecond switch264, a pacingcharge storage capacitor263,coupling capacitor265, and a pacercapacitor charging circuit269 all of which are cooperatively operable under the direction of a controller of known suitable construction. The power supply orbattery261 is preferably the battery provided to power the pacemaker and may comprise any number of commercially available batteries suitable for pacing applications. Theswitches262,264 may be implemented using any number of conventionally available switches. The pacingcapacitor charging circuit269 includes circuitry to regulate the voltage across the pacingcharge storage capacitor263.
The pacingcharge storage capacitor263 may also comprise any number of conventional storage capacitors that can be used to develop a sufficient pacing charge for stimulating the heart. The primary function of thecoupling capacitor265 is to attenuate the polarization voltage or “afterpotential” which results from pacing and additionally block any DC signals from reaching theheart268 during pacing. Thecoupling capacitor265 may have a capacitance, for example, in the range of about 2 microfarads to about 22 microfarads. Energy stored in the pacingcharge storage capacitor263 may be delivered to theheart268 using various combinations ofcardiac electrodes266,267, as described above.
FIG. 2C illustrates a block diagram ofcircuit295 that may be used to sense cardiac signals following the delivery of a pacing stimulation and classify the cardiac response to the pacing stimulation according to embodiments of the invention. Aswitch matrix284 is used to couple thecardiac electrodes271,272 in various combinations discussed above to thesensing portion270 of the cardiacresponse classification circuit295. Thesensing portion270 includes filtering and blankingcircuitry275,277,sense amplifier285,band pass filter281, and window generation and signalcharacteristic detector282. The window generation and signalcharacteristic detector282 is coupled to a cardiacresponse classification processor283.
A control system, e.g., thecontrol system220 depicted inFIG. 2A, is operatively coupled to components of the cardiacresponse classification circuit295 and controls the operation of the cardiacresponse classification circuit295, including the filtering and blankingcircuits275,277. Following a blanking period of sufficient duration following delivery of the pacing stimulation, the blankingcircuitry275,277 operates to allow detection of a cardiac signal responsive to the pacing stimulation. The cardiac signal is filtered, amplified, and converted from analog to digital form. The digitized signal is communicated to the cardiacresponse classification processor283 which operates in cooperation with other components of thecontrol system220,FIG. 2A to classify cardiac responses to pacing according to embodiments of the invention.
When pacing pulses delivered to the heart produce a depolarization wave in cardiac tissue resulting in a cardiac contraction, a captured response may be detected by examining the cardiac signal following the delivery of the pacing pulse.FIG. 3 is a graph illustrating the output of thesensing portion270 of the cardiacresponse classification circuit295 ofFIG. 2C in which the cardiac signal consistently indicates capture following a sequence of pacing pulses. In this example, a pacing pulse is delivered to the heart using the RV-tip and RV-coil electrodes, also referred to herein as a right ventricular rate channel. The cardiac signal following a right ventricular pace is sensed using a RV-coil to SVC-coil+can sensing vector, also referred to herein as the shock channel.
FIG. 4A depicts superimposed graphs of capturedresponses410,non-captured responses420, and fusion/pseudofusion beats430.FIG. 4B depicts superimposed graphs comparing an earlyintrinsic beat440 and a capturedresponse450. The graphs ofFIGS. 4A and 4B represent the cardiac signal following the pacing stimulation if the pacing pulse is delivered on the RV rate channel and the cardiac signal following pacing is sensed on the RV shock channel. The captured response exhibits a consistent morphology when detected on this vector, as illustrated in the graphs ofFIGS. 4A and 4B.
In another example, the same vector may be used to pace the heart chamber and sense the cardiac signal following the pace to classify the cardiac response. Pacing in the right ventricle may be accomplished using the pacing vector RV-tip to RV-ring, for example.FIG. 4C illustrates superimposed graphs of a capturedresponse460 and anon-captured response470 sensed using the same sensing vector, e.g., RA-tip to RA-ring.
As previously discussed, if a first vector, e.g., rate channel vector RV-tip to RV-coil, is used to deliver a pacing pulse and a second vector, e.g., shock channel vector RV-coil to SVC-coil or RV-coil to SVC-coil+can, is used to sense the cardiac signal responsive to the pacing pulse, the pacing artifact is separated from the evoked response due to a propagation delay from RV-tip to RV-coil.FIG. 5 is a graph illustrating acardiac signal520 sensed on a right ventricular (RV) shock channel vector following apacing pulse510 delivered on a rate channel. Thecardiac signal520 exhibits apropagation delay530, for example, a propagation delay of about 55 ms, between the pacingpulse510 and the portion of the cardiac signal indicating a capturedresponse540.
FIG. 6 is a flowchart illustrating a method of classifying a cardiac response to a pacing stimulation in accordance with embodiments of the invention. In this method the same electrode combination may be used for pacing and sensing, or a first electrode combination may be used for pacing and a second electrode combination may be used for sensing. If the same electrode combination is used for pacing and sensing, then pacing artifact cancellation may facilitate cardiac response classification. In accordance with this method, a pacing stimulation is delivered610 to a heart and a first cardiac response classification window is established620 subsequent to delivery of the pacing stimulation.
The pacing stimulation may be delivered to any heart chamber. For example, the pacing stimulation may be delivered to the right ventricle, the left ventricle, the right atrium, and the left atrium.
The cardiac signal is sensed630 in the first cardiac response classification window. If a trigger feature of the cardiac signal is detected640 in the first classification window, a second cardiac response classification window is established650. The cardiac signal is sensed660 in the second cardiac response classification window. The cardiac response to the pacing stimulation delivered to the chamber or combination of chambers is classified670 based on one or more characteristics of the cardiac signal. Although in various examples provided herein, the cardiac response classification windows are represented as contiguous and non-overlapping, the classification windows may be overlapping and/or may involve a delay interval defined between classification windows.
The process of establishing cardiac response classification windows if trigger characteristics are detected in previous cardiac response classification windows may continue until a sufficient amount of information is acquired for classifying the cardiac response. The flowchart ofFIG. 7 illustrates a method of triggering multiple cardiac response classification windows in accordance with embodiments of the invention. A pacing stimulation is delivered to theheart710 and a cardiac response classification window is established720 subsequent to the delivery of the pacing stimulation. A cardiac signal following the pacing stimulation is sensed in the classification window. If a trigger characteristic is detected740, more information is needed750 to classify the cardiac response. The next classification window is established720. Additional classification windows are established to facilitate the acquisition of additional cardiac signal information as indicated in process blocks720-740. If enough information is acquired, then the cardiac response is classified760.
In the example process illustrated inFIG. 7, the trigger characteristic may comprise the absence of sufficient information to classify the cardiac response. This situation may arise, for example, if a cardiac signal feature indicative of a particular cardiac response type is not detected, but additional information is desired before eliminating the particular cardiac response type as the cardiac response. Further, this situation may arise if a cardiac signal feature indicative of a particular cardiac response type is detected, but additional information is required to classify the cardiac response. Additional information may also be required to classify the cardiac response if the cardiac signal is detected as noisy.
FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a retriggerable cardiac response classification window in accordance with embodiments of the invention. Apacing stimulation810 is delivered to the heart, for example, to the right ventricle. The cardiac signal is blanked for a period oftime820, for example, about 0 ms to about 40 ms, following the delivery of thepacing stimulation810. After theblanking period820, a first cardiacresponse classification window830 is established. The length of the first cardiac response classification window may be a programmable length, for example, less than about 325 ms. The cardiac signal following the pacing pulse is sensed during the first cardiacresponse classification window830. If a trigger characteristic is detected within the first cardiac response classification window, then a second cardiacresponse classification window840 is triggered. The length of the second cardiac response classification window may be programmable, and may have a length less than about 325 ms. The length of the second classification window may be different from the length of the first classification window. Alternatively, the lengths of the first and the second classification windows may be the same.
Adelay period850 may be established between the end of the first cardiacresponse classification window830 and the beginning of the second cardiacresponse classification window840. The length of the delay may be in a range of about 0 ms (no delay) to about 40 ms, for example. The cardiac signal is sensed in the second cardiacresponse classification window840 if the second cardiacresponse classification window840 is triggered. The cardiac response to thepacing stimulation810 is classified based on characteristics of the sensed cardiac signal.
FIG. 9 illustrates cardiac signals indicative of a variety of cardiac pacing responses and their relation to the cardiac response classification windows in accordance with embodiments of the invention. In the depiction ofFIG. 9, cardiac signals indicative of anon-captured response910, a capturedresponse930 and a fusion/pseudofusion beat920 are illustrated. Ablanking period940 follows delivery of the pacing pulse. Afirst classification window950 begins after the pacing pulse. If a trigger characteristic of the cardiac signal is detected in the first classification window, asecond classification window960 is established.
The flowchart ofFIG. 10 illustrates a method of classifying the cardiac response to pacing in accordance with embodiments of the invention. The process illustrated inFIG. 10 involves first and second capture detection regions respectively defined in the first and the second cardiac response classification windows. The first and second capture detection regions may be defined as functions of time and amplitude. The capture detection regions may be any shape, including, for example, a circle, square, rectangle, or other shape. The first capture detection region may have a shape that is different from the second capture detection region. In this example, a cardiac signal peak detected in the first capture detection region comprises a trigger characteristic for the first cardiac response classification window. The peak of the cardiac signal within a cardiac response classification window may comprise, for example, a signal maximum or signal minimum detected within the cardiac response classification window.
Turning now toFIG. 10, subsequent to thedelivery1010 of a pacing stimulation, a first classification window is established1020. The cardiac signal is sensed following the pacing stimulation and a peak of the cardiac signal is determined1030 in the first classification window. If the absolute value of the peak amplitude is less or equal to1040 a threshold value, then the cardiac response is classified1050 as a non-captured response. If the absolute value of the peak amplitude is beyond1040 the threshold value and is detected1060 in the first capture detection region, then a second classification window is established1068. In this example,detection1060 of a peak of the cardiac signal within the first capture detection region comprises a trigger characteristic of the cardiac signal. If the trigger characteristic is detected1060, then the second classification window is established1068.
If the peak of the cardiac signal exceeds1040 the threshold value, but is not detected1060 in the first capture detection region, then the cardiac response may be classified1065 as fusion/pseudofusion.
If the second cardiac response classification window is established1068, the cardiac signal is sensed in the second cardiac response classification window. A peak of the cardiac signal is detected1072 in the second classification window. If the peak is not detected1075 in the second capture detection region, then the cardiac response may be classified1065 as a fusion/pseudofusion. If the peak is detected1075 in the second capture detection region, then the cardiac response is classified1080 as a captured response.
The first and/or the second capture detection windows may be updated1090 based on the characteristics of the sensed cardiac signal. In one implementation, the location of the cardiac signal peaks in the first and the second capture detection windows are combined with previously acquired cardiac signal peaks, for example, by averaging. The new average peak locations may be used to define the locations of subsequent capture detection regions. Various methods and systems for initializing and updating target regions including capture detection regions are described in commonly owned U.S. patent application identified by Ser. No. 10/448,260, filed May 28, 2003, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
FIG. 11 is a diagram illustrating the cardiac response classification windows and the capture detection regions described in connection withFIG. 10 and used in the classifying the cardiac response to pacing in accordance with embodiments of the invention. Apacing stimulation1110 is delivered to the heart and a first cardiacresponse classification window1120 is established subsequent to the delivery of thepacing stimulation1110. A first capture detection region (CDR)1130 is defined within the first cardiac response classification window. The cardiac signal following the pacing stimulation is sensed and the peak amplitude is detected. If the peak is less than or equal to athreshold1140, then the cardiac response is classified as a non-captured response. If the cardiac response is classified as a non-captured response, then a back uppace1115 may be delivered upon expiration of a back uppace interval1125. The back uppace interval1125 may comprise an interval of about 100 ms, for example. If a back up pace is delivered, one or more additional cardiac response classification windows may be established to assess the effectiveness of the back up pace.
If the cardiac signal peak falls within the firstcapture detection region1130, then a second cardiac response classification window is established1150. The cardiac signal is sensed in the second cardiac response classification window and a peak of the cardiac signal is detected. If the peak of the cardiac signal falls within the secondcapture detection region1160, then the cardiac response is classified as a captured response. The cardiac response may be classified as fusion/pseudofusion if the peak of the cardiac signal falls beyond the boundary of the firstcapture detection region1130 in thefirst classification window1120 and/or beyond the boundary of the secondcapture detection region1160 in thesecond classification window1150.
FIG. 12 is a diagram illustrating the positions of cardiac signal peaks detected in the first and thesecond classification windows1220,1250 for various cardiac responses in relation to the first and secondcapture detection regions1230,1260. Cardiac responses associated with signal peaks less than or equal to anon-capture threshold1240 are classified as non-captured responses.
FIGS. 13A and 13B illustrate a flowchart of a method of cardiac response classification including intrinsic response classification in accordance with embodiments of the invention. A pacing stimulation is delivered to theheart1305. A first classification window is established1310 subsequent to the pacing stimulation. A cardiac signal peak is detected in the first classification window. If the magnitude of the cardiac signal peak amplitude is less than or equal to1330 a threshold value, then the cardiac response is classified1335 as a non-captured response.
If the magnitude of the peak amplitude is greater than1330 the threshold and the peak is detected1340 in an intrinsic detection region, then the cardiac response is classified1345 as a non-captured response combined with an intrinsic beat. If the peak amplitude is greater than1330 the threshold and the peak is not detected1350 in a first capture detection region, then the cardiac response is classified as fusion/pseudofusion.
If the peak is detected1350 in the first capture detection region, then a second cardiac response classification window is established1360. A peak of the cardiac signal is detected1375 in the second cardiac response classification window. If the peak of the cardiac signal is not detected1390 in a second capture detection region, then the cardiac response is classified1392 as a fusion/pseudofusion. If the peak is detected1390 in second capture detection region, then the cardiac response is classified as a capturedresponse1395.
FIG. 14 is a diagram illustrating the cardiac response classification windows, capture detection windows, and the intrinsic detection window described in connection withFIGS. 13A and 13B and used to classify the cardiac response to pacing in accordance with embodiments of the invention. Apacing stimulation1410 is delivered to the heart and a first cardiacresponse classification window1420 is established subsequent to the delivery of thepacing stimulation1410. A first capture detection region (CDR)1430 is defined within the first cardiac response classification window. Anintrinsic detection region1470 is defined. The cardiac signal following the pacing stimulation is sensed and the peak amplitude is detected. If the magnitude of the peak is less than or equal to athreshold1440, then the cardiac response is classified as a non-captured response.
If the peak of the cardiac signal detected in the first cardiacresponse classification window1420 is detected in theintrinsic detection region1470, then the cardiac response is classified as a non-captured response combined with an intrinsic beat.
If the cardiac signal peak falls within the firstcapture detection region1430, then a second cardiac response classification window is established1450. The cardiac signal is sensed in the second cardiacresponse classification window1450 and a peak of the cardiac signal is detected. If the peak of the cardiac signal falls within the secondcapture detection region1460, then the cardiac response is classified as a captured response.
The cardiac response may be classified as a fusion/pseudofusion beat if the peak of the cardiac signal falls beyond the boundaries of the firstcapture detection region1430 and/or beyond the boundaries of the secondcapture detection region1460.
Before using the capture detection regions described above, the capture detection regions may be initialized for use. In accordance with various embodiments, an initialization process may involve determining that the morphology of the cardiac signals includes consistent peak information. A number of cardiac signals may be used to determine the boundaries of the capture detection regions.
FIG. 15 illustrates a flowchart of a method of initializing detection regions, e.g., capture detection regions and/or intrinsic detection regions, in accordance with embodiments of the invention. The method involves sensing a number of cardiac signals representative of a particular response. If a sufficient number of similar cardiac beats representative of a particular type of pacing response are acquired, then the capture detection region boundaries may be calculated based on the acquired beats.
The detection regions boundaries may be calculated, for example, based on coordinates of characteristic features of the sensed cardiac signals. In one implementation, the average of the characteristic feature coordinates may be defined as a point, such as a center, or other location, within a detection region. In this example, the boundaries of a detection region may be established according to a predetermined shape, for example, a circle, square, rectangle, rhombus, or other quadrilateral. Additionally or alternatively, the detection region may be created to enclose a predetermined area.
After a detection region is initialized, it may be adapted using additional cardiac signal representative of a particular type of cardiac response. Initialization of capture detection regions preferably involves pacing at an energy level sufficient to ensure an adequate number of cardiac signals representative of a captured response. Adaptation of the capture detection regions may involve modification of capture detection region parameters using subsequently acquired cardiac signals representative of a captured response.
Turning now to the initialization process illustrated inFIG. 15, a pacing stimulation is delivered1505 to the heart and a cardiac beat signal following delivery of the pacing stimulation is sensed1510. One or more characteristic features of the first beat of theinitialization attempt1515 may be used to calculate1520 an initial morphology template representative of the type of cardiac response.
If the cardiac beat is not1515 the first beat in the initialization attempt, then one or more characteristic features of the cardiac beat are compared1525 to the previously determined template. The comparison may be implemented, for example, by calculating a degree of similarity or correlation between the sensed cardiac beat and the template. If the sensed cardiac beat is similar1525 to the template, then the sensed cardiac beat is saved1530.
If enough similar beats are saved1535, for example, about 7 similar beats out of about 12 beats, then the detection region parameters are calculated1540 using the stored beats. The initialization attempt is complete1545.
If the sensed cardiac beat is not similar1525 to the first beat, and if too many dissimilar beats have been sensed1550 in the initialization attempt, then another attempt may be initiated1560. However, if too many previous attempts have been made1555, then the initialization effort fails1565.
FIGS. 16A and 16B illustrate a process of initializing the capture detection regions in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.FIG. 16A shows fivecardiac signal waveforms1605 each representing a captured response.Peaks1610 of thecardiac signal waveforms1605 are detected in the first cardiacresponse classification window1690. Thepeaks1610 detected in thefirst classification window1690 are used to form the firstcapture detection region1650.Peaks1620 of thecardiac signal waveforms1605 detected in the second cardiacresponse classification window1680 are used to form the secondcapture detection region1640.
In accordance with one implementation, the coordinate locations of the peaks detected in a particular classification window may be averaged, and the averaged coordinate location used as a center for the capture detection region. As illustrated inFIG. 16B, the averaged coordinatelocation1625 of the coordinate locations of thecardiac signal peaks1620 detected in the first cardiacresponse classification window1690 is used as the center of the firstcapture detection region1640. The averagedlocation1615 of the coordinate locations of thecardiac signal peaks1620 detected in the second cardiacresponse classification window1680 are used as the center of the secondcapture detection region1650.
After initialization of the detection regions, the detection regions may be adapted to accommodate gradual morphological changes in the cardiac signal. A cardiac signal waveform, e.g., a cardiac signal waveform representative of a captured response, may exhibit natural variations in its morphology over time. Unless the detection regions are adjusted, the cardiac waveform morphology may gradually drift away from the originally established detection regions. It may be desirable to adjust the detection regions to track changes in the captured response waveform.
In accordance with embodiments of the invention, one or more of the detection regions may be adapted to changes in cardiac waveform morphology by adjusting the one or more detection regions. A particular detection region may be adjusted according to a relationship, e.g., a spatial relationship, between the particular detection region and its associated waveform feature, for example a peak of the cardiac signal. Adjustment of the detection regions may involve, for example changing the size, shape, or location of the detection region.
A cardiac feature location, such as a peak, may be identified by a timing coordinate (usually represented as an x-axis coordinate) and an amplitude coordinate (y-axis coordinate). A detection region may be adjusted based on a relationship between a detected feature's amplitude coordinate and the associated detection region's amplitude range. A detection region may also be adjusted based on a relationship between an associated detected feature's timing coordinate and the detection region's amplitude range. In other examples, the detection region may be adjusted based on a variability of an associated detected feature's timing and/or amplitude coordinates.
According to embodiments of the invention, the adjustment of a detection region involves modifying the detection region in the direction of an associated cardiac feature location. In various examples, a detected cardiac feature may fall within a particular detection region, but be offset from the center of the detection region. The location, size, and/or shape of the detection region may be modified in the direction of re-centering or otherwise re-orienting the detection region with respect to an associated detected cardiac feature point falling within the detection region. The detection region may be adjusted, for example, using a function-based or rules-based technique.
According to one implementation, adjustment of the detection regions may be accomplished using a function that is based on present and past locations of an associated detected cardiac waveform feature, e.g., a peak. According to one example, the detection region may be adjusted using an exponential average based on the present location of the waveform feature and the previous locations of the detection region. Adjustment of the detection region may be implemented based onEquation 1 below.
Adjusted Location=∀*Past Location+(1−∀)*Current Location  [1]
By selecting the values of ∀, more emphasis may be placed on the past location of the detection region, corresponding to ∀>0.5, or more emphasis may be placed on the current location, corresponding to ∀<0.5. The value of ∀ may vary for different features or characteristics. The location of the detection region may be determined by re-centering or otherwise re-orienting the detection region using the adjusted location.
In other implementations, a detection region may be adjusted using a rules-based technique. For example, the detection region may be adjusted in the direction of a detected associated feature point based on one or more re-centering rules.
A cardiac beat may be required to meet certain qualifications before it is used to adjust the detection regions. A cardiac beat qualified to adjust a detection region may be required to meet certain timing, rate, amplitude, regularity, or other criteria. The cardiac beat may be compared, for example, to a template representing a captured response. If the cardiac beat is consistent with the template, then the cardiac beat may be used to adjust the capture detection regions.
Adjustment of a detection region is illustrated in the diagrams ofFIGS. 17A-B.FIG. 17A illustrates adetection region1720 having acenter1710 based on locations of the previously detected cardiac waveform features associated with the detection region.FIG. 17B illustrates the situation after the next cardiac signal is sensed. The current cardiacwaveform feature point1730 is detected. The location of thecurrent feature point1730 has drifted above and to the right of theoriginal center1710 illustrated inFIG. 17A. Acurrent detection region1740 centered on the newcardiac waveform feature1730 would represent a significant change from theoriginal detection region1720. In one example embodiment, adjustment of the detection region is performed so that modifications exhibit a relatively smooth transition. The adjusteddetection region1750 may be determined, forexample using Equation 1 or other method, to smoothly accommodate the waveform feature drift based on both the pastdetection region location1720 and the currentdetection region location1740. The adjustment of the detection region may be limited to predetermined upper and lower boundaries with respect to the amplitude and time coordinates.
AlthoughEquation 1 mathematically describes adjusting the detection region location using an exponential average, other methods of adjusting the detection region locations are also possible. For example, in other embodiments, each of the one or more detection regions may be adjusted according to a moving window average, or another function representing the change in distance between the original detection region and the waveform feature. In a further embodiment, the detection regions may be adjusted according to a rules-based process. A rules-based adjustment process may involve adjusting the detection region location by an amount based on the locations of subsequently detected cardiac waveform features. For example, the detection region location may be moved an incremental amount to the right if a predetermined number, e.g., five, consecutive cardiac signals exhibit cardiac waveform features located within the detection region, but to the right of center of the original detection region. Adjustments in other directions, i.e., left, up, and down, may be made using similar criteria.
In yet other embodiments, adjustment of a detection region may include adjusting the shape and/or size of the detection region.FIGS. 17C-D are diagrams illustrating adjusting a detection region by modifying the shape of the detection region.FIG. 17C illustrates adetection region1720 having acenter1710.FIG. 17D illustrates the situation after the next cardiac signal is sensed. Thecardiac waveform feature1760 associated with thedetection region1720 is detected. The location of thecurrent feature point1760 has drifted above theoriginal center1710 of thedetection region1720. An adjusteddetection region1770, having a different shape from theoriginal detection region1720, is defined. The adjustment of the detection region may be limited to a predetermined range with respect to the amplitude and time coordinates.
Embodiments of the invention are directed to methods and systems employing one or more retriggerable cardiac response classification windows. Various embodiments describe discriminating between cardiac response types based on one or more characteristics of the cardiac signal detected the cardiac response classification windows. The use of multiple classification windows for cardiac response classification is described in commonly owned U.S. patent application, identified under Attorney Docket Number GUID.045PA, filed Dec. 11, 2003, and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Methods and systems for cardiac response classification involving using different pacing and sensing electrode combinations are described in commonly owned U.S. patent application, identified under Attorney Docket Number GUID.160PA, filed concurrently with this patent application and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Various modifications and additions can be made to the preferred embodiments discussed hereinabove without departing from the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the scope of the present invention should not be limited by the particular embodiments described above, but should be defined only by the claims set forth below and equivalents thereof.

Claims (23)

What is claimed is:
1. A method of classifying a cardiac response to a pacing stimulation, comprising:
delivering the pacing stimulation to a heart chamber;
sensing a cardiac signal of the heart chamber following delivery of the pacing stimulation;
detecting a first trigger feature of the cardiac signal within a first predetermined capture detection region;
in response to detecting the first trigger feature of the cardiac signal within the first predetermined capture detection region, continuing to evaluate at least a portion of a QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the first trigger feature;
classifying the cardiac response as fusion or capture of the heart chamber based on at least a portion of the QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the first trigger feature; and
delivering pacing therapy based on the classification of the cardiac response as fusion or capture.
2. The method ofclaim 1, wherein classifying the cardiac response as fusion or capture comprises:
determining if a second feature of the cardiac signal, which is part of the QRS waveform of the cardiac signal, falls within a second predetermined capture detection region triggered by detection of the first trigger feature within the first predetermined capture region;
classifying the cardiac response as capture if the first trigger feature of the cardiac signal falls within the first capture detection region and the second feature of the cardiac signal falls within the second predetermined capture detection region; and
classifying the cardiac response as fusion if the second feature of the cardiac signal does not fall within the second predetermined capture detection region triggered by detection of the first trigger feature within the first predetermined capture region.
3. The method ofclaim 1, wherein the first predetermined capture detection region is bounded by upper and lower time boundaries and upper and lower amplitude boundaries.
4. The method ofclaim 1, wherein:
the first predetermined capture detection region occurs within a first classification window; and
wherein continuing to evaluate the portion of the QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the first trigger feature comprises continuing to evaluate the portion of the QRS waveform of the cardiac signal in one or more additional classification windows.
5. The method ofclaim 1, wherein discriminating between fusion and capture comprises discriminating between fusion and capture of the left ventricle.
6. The method ofclaim 1, wherein discriminating between fusion and capture comprises discriminating between fusion and capture of the right ventricle.
7. The method ofclaim 1, wherein discriminating between fusion and capture comprises discriminating between fusion and capture of an atrial chamber.
8. The method ofclaim 1, further comprising classifying the cardiac response as an intrinsic beat if the first trigger feature of the cardiac signal falls within an intrinsic detection region.
9. The method ofclaim 8, wherein the intrinsic detection region is bounded by upper and lower time boundaries and upper and lower amplitude boundaries.
10. A cardiac device, comprising:
a pacing pulse generator configured to generate cardiac pacing pulses;
a sensing system configured to sense a cardiac pacing response signal of a heart chamber following delivery of a pacing pulse to the heart chamber; and
a cardiac response classification system configured to detect a first trigger feature of the cardiac signal within a first classification window, and, in response to detecting the first trigger feature of the cardiac signal, to continue to evaluate at least a portion of a QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the first trigger feature, the cardiac response classification system further configured to discriminate between fusion and capture of the heart chamber based on the portion of the QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the first trigger feature.
11. The device ofclaim 10, further comprising one or more left ventricular electrodes coupled to the sensing system, wherein the heart chamber is the left ventricle and the cardiac pacing response signal is sensed via the left ventricular electrodes.
12. The device ofclaim 11, wherein the pacing pulse generator is configured to deliver a back up pace if noncapture of the heart chamber is detected by the cardiac response classification system.
13. The device ofclaim 10, wherein the pacing pulse is delivered using a first electrode vector and the cardiac pacing response signal is sensed using a second electrode vector.
14. The device ofclaim 10, wherein the cardiac response classification system is configured to determine if the first trigger feature occurs within a first capture detection region, the first capture detection region bounded by upper and lower time boundaries and upper and lower amplitude boundaries.
15. The device ofclaim 10, wherein:
the cardiac response classification system is configured to continue to evaluate the cardiac signal in one or more additional classification windows that extend after the first classification window.
16. The device ofclaim 15, wherein the cardiac response classification system is configured to adapt one or both of an amplitude coordinate and a timing coordinate of the first classification window based on previous captured responses.
17. A cardiac device, comprising:
a pacing pulse generator configured to generate cardiac pacing pulses;
a sensing system configured to sense a cardiac pacing response signal of a heart chamber following delivery of a pacing pulse to the heart chamber; and
a cardiac response classification system configured to sense for a trigger feature of the cardiac signal within a first classification window, and, in response to detecting the trigger feature of the cardiac signal within the first classification window to continue to evaluate at least a portion of a QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the first classification window in one or more additional classification windows, the cardiac response classification system further configured to discriminate between fusion and capture of the heart chamber based at least in part on the portion of the QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs in the one or more additional classification windows.
18. The device ofclaim 17, wherein the cardiac response classification system is configured to determine if the trigger feature occurs within a capture detection region of the first classification window.
19. The device ofclaim 17, wherein the cardiac response classification system is configured to discriminate between fusion and capture of the heart chamber based on a timing of a feature that occurs within one of the one or more additional classification windows.
20. The device ofclaim 17, wherein the cardiac response classification system is configured to discriminate between fusion and capture of the left ventricle.
21. A method of operating a cardiac device, comprising:
delivering the pacing stimulation to a heart chamber during a cardiac cycle;
sensing a cardiac signal of the heart chamber during the cardiac cycle and following delivery of the pacing stimulation;
determining if a trigger feature of the cardiac signal occurs within one or more detection regions, the detection regions having upper and lower timing boundaries and upper and lower amplitude boundaries;
in response to determining that a cardiac signal trigger feature falls within one of the detection regions, continuing to evaluate at least a portion of a QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the determined trigger feature;
classifying the cardiac signal based on one or more of detection of the trigger feature within the one or more detection regions and at least a portion of the QRS waveform of the cardiac signal that occurs after the determined trigger feature; and
delivering pacing therapy based on classification of the cardiac signal.
22. A cardiac device configured to implement the method ofclaim 21.
23. A method of classifying a cardiac response to a pacing stimulation, comprising:
delivering the pacing stimulation to a heart chamber;
sensing a cardiac signal of the heart chamber following delivery of the pacing stimulation;
searching for a first feature of a QRS waveform associated with the cardiac signal within a first capture detection region;
if the first feature is detected within the first capture detection region, searching for a second feature of the QRS waveform within a second capture detection region;
classifying the cardiac response as fusion or capture of the heart chamber based, at least in part, on whether the first feature of the QRS waveform was detected in the first capture detection region and/or whether the second feature of the QRS waveform was detected in the second capture detection region; and
delivering pacing therapy based on the classification of the cardiac response as fusion or capture.
US12/818,0662003-12-122010-06-17Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windowsActive2027-04-10US9993205B2 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US12/818,066US9993205B2 (en)2003-12-122010-06-17Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US15/970,573US10898142B2 (en)2003-12-122018-05-03Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US10/734,599US7774064B2 (en)2003-12-122003-12-12Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US12/818,066US9993205B2 (en)2003-12-122010-06-17Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US10/734,599ContinuationUS7774064B2 (en)2003-12-122003-12-12Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows

Related Child Applications (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US15/970,573ContinuationUS10898142B2 (en)2003-12-122018-05-03Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows

Publications (2)

Publication NumberPublication Date
US20100256703A1 US20100256703A1 (en)2010-10-07
US9993205B2true US9993205B2 (en)2018-06-12

Family

ID=34653401

Family Applications (3)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US10/734,599Expired - Fee RelatedUS7774064B2 (en)2003-12-122003-12-12Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US12/818,066Active2027-04-10US9993205B2 (en)2003-12-122010-06-17Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US15/970,573Expired - LifetimeUS10898142B2 (en)2003-12-122018-05-03Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows

Family Applications Before (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US10/734,599Expired - Fee RelatedUS7774064B2 (en)2003-12-122003-12-12Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows

Family Applications After (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US15/970,573Expired - LifetimeUS10898142B2 (en)2003-12-122018-05-03Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows

Country Status (1)

CountryLink
US (3)US7774064B2 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US20180249963A1 (en)*2003-12-122018-09-06Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US20220062645A1 (en)*2020-08-312022-03-03Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device with pacing capture classification

Families Citing this family (52)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US7477932B2 (en)2003-05-282009-01-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac waveform template creation, maintenance and use
US20060247693A1 (en)2005-04-282006-11-02Yanting DongNon-captured intrinsic discrimination in cardiac pacing response classification
US7319900B2 (en)2003-12-112008-01-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using multiple classification windows
US8521284B2 (en)2003-12-122013-08-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using multisite sensing and pacing
US7706866B2 (en)2004-06-242010-04-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic orientation determination for ECG measurements using multiple electrodes
US7805185B2 (en)2005-05-092010-09-28Cardiac Pacemakers, In.Posture monitoring using cardiac activation sequences
US7509170B2 (en)2005-05-092009-03-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic capture verification using electrocardiograms sensed from multiple implanted electrodes
US7890159B2 (en)2004-09-302011-02-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac activation sequence monitoring and tracking
US7647108B2 (en)*2004-09-302010-01-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for selection of cardiac pacing electrode configurations
US7457664B2 (en)*2005-05-092008-11-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Closed loop cardiac resynchronization therapy using cardiac activation sequence information
US7917196B2 (en)2005-05-092011-03-29Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Arrhythmia discrimination using electrocardiograms sensed from multiple implanted electrodes
US7761162B2 (en)*2004-12-132010-07-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Capture verification with intrinsic response discrimination
US7734347B2 (en)*2004-12-152010-06-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing response classification based on waveform feature variability
US7908006B2 (en)*2004-12-152011-03-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing response classification using an adaptable classification interval
US7930029B2 (en)*2004-12-152011-04-19Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Template initialization for evoked response detection
US8229561B2 (en)*2004-12-152012-07-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Atrial retrograde management
US7587240B2 (en)*2004-12-152009-09-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Atrial capture verification
US7761159B2 (en)2005-03-172010-07-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm pacing rate selection for automatic capture threshold testing
US7392086B2 (en)2005-04-262008-06-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable cardiac device and method for reduced phrenic nerve stimulation
US7499751B2 (en)*2005-04-282009-03-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac signal template generation using waveform clustering
US7765004B2 (en)*2005-04-282010-07-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for managing fusion and noise in cardiac pacing response classification
US7574260B2 (en)*2005-04-282009-08-11Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Adaptive windowing for cardiac waveform discrimination
US7337000B2 (en)2005-04-282008-02-26Cardiac Pacemakers Inc.Selection of cardiac signal features detected in multiple classification intervals for cardiac pacing response classification
US7392088B2 (en)*2005-04-282008-06-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Capture detection for multi-chamber pacing
US7457666B2 (en)2005-05-252008-11-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Retrograde atrial sensing for identifying sub-threshold atrial pacing
US7529578B2 (en)2005-07-122009-05-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Multi channel approach to capture verification
US8527048B2 (en)2006-06-292013-09-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Local and non-local sensing for cardiac pacing
US7580741B2 (en)*2006-08-182009-08-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and device for determination of arrhythmia rate zone thresholds using a probability function
US8948867B2 (en)*2006-09-142015-02-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Capture detection with cross chamber backup pacing
US8209013B2 (en)2006-09-142012-06-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Therapeutic electrical stimulation that avoids undesirable activation
US8712507B2 (en)*2006-09-142014-04-29Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Systems and methods for arranging and labeling cardiac episodes
US8290590B2 (en)*2006-11-172012-10-16Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Dynamic morphology based atrial automatic threshold
US7801610B2 (en)*2006-11-172010-09-21Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for management of atrial retrograde conduction and pacemaker mediated tachyarrhythmia
US7941208B2 (en)*2006-11-292011-05-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Therapy delivery for identified tachyarrhythmia episode types
US7873414B2 (en)*2007-04-172011-01-18Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Patient characteristic based adaptive anti-tachy pacing programming
US9037239B2 (en)2007-08-072015-05-19Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus to perform electrode combination selection
US8265736B2 (en)2007-08-072012-09-11Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus to perform electrode combination selection
US8649866B2 (en)*2008-02-142014-02-11Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for phrenic stimulation detection
US8452405B2 (en)*2009-05-052013-05-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for mitigating the occurrence of arrhythmia during atrial pacing
US8494619B2 (en)*2009-05-272013-07-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Systems and methods for the generation and display of fusion statistics
US20120303082A1 (en)*2010-12-022012-11-29Yanting DongAdjusting Cardiac Pacing Response Sensing Intervals
US9161705B2 (en)*2010-12-072015-10-20The Board Of Regents Of The University Of Texas SystemMethod and device for early detection of heart attack
US10485452B2 (en)*2015-02-252019-11-26Leonardo Y. OrellanoFall detection systems and methods
US11026619B2 (en)*2016-04-132021-06-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Determining cardiac pacing capture effectiveness of an implantable medical device
US11723579B2 (en)2017-09-192023-08-15Neuroenhancement Lab, LLCMethod and apparatus for neuroenhancement
US11717686B2 (en)2017-12-042023-08-08Neuroenhancement Lab, LLCMethod and apparatus for neuroenhancement to facilitate learning and performance
US12280219B2 (en)2017-12-312025-04-22NeuroLight, Inc.Method and apparatus for neuroenhancement to enhance emotional response
US11273283B2 (en)2017-12-312022-03-15Neuroenhancement Lab, LLCMethod and apparatus for neuroenhancement to enhance emotional response
US11364361B2 (en)2018-04-202022-06-21Neuroenhancement Lab, LLCSystem and method for inducing sleep by transplanting mental states
EP3849410A4 (en)2018-09-142022-11-02Neuroenhancement Lab, LLC SLEEP ENHANCEMENT SYSTEM AND METHOD
JP7346858B2 (en)*2019-03-142023-09-20株式会社リコー Biological information measuring device, biological information measuring system, biological information measuring method, and biological information measuring program
US11786694B2 (en)2019-05-242023-10-17NeuroLight, Inc.Device, method, and app for facilitating sleep

Citations (435)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3782367A (en)*1972-02-251974-01-01Hoffmann La Roche{37 pacemaker{38 {11 monitoring technique and system
US3920005A (en)1972-03-161975-11-18Medtronic IncEvaluation system for cardiac stimulators
US4023564A (en)1976-01-261977-05-17Spacelabs, Inc.Arrhythmia detector
US4340063A (en)1980-01-021982-07-20Empi, Inc.Stimulation device
US4365636A (en)1981-06-191982-12-28Medicon, Inc.Method of monitoring patient respiration and predicting apnea therefrom
US4458692A (en)1982-02-111984-07-10Arrhythmia Research Technology, Inc.System and method for predicting ventricular tachycardia with a gain controlled high pass filter
US4550221A (en)1983-10-071985-10-29Scott MabusthTouch sensitive control device
US4552154A (en)1984-03-121985-11-12Medtronic, Inc.Waveform morphology discriminator and method
US4562841A (en)1982-08-051986-01-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Programmable multi-mode cardiac pacemaker
US4573481A (en)1984-06-251986-03-04Huntington Institute Of Applied ResearchImplantable electrode array
US4648407A (en)1985-07-081987-03-10Respitrace CorporationMethod for detecting and differentiating central and obstructive apneas in newborns
US4680708A (en)1984-03-201987-07-14Washington UniversityMethod and apparatus for analyzing electrocardiographic signals
US4686332A (en)1986-06-261987-08-11International Business Machines CorporationCombined finger touch and stylus detection system for use on the viewing surface of a visual display device
US4827935A (en)1986-04-241989-05-09Purdue Research FoundationDemand electroventilator
US4860766A (en)1983-11-181989-08-29Respitrace Corp.Noninvasive method for measuring and monitoring intrapleural pressure in newborns
US4878497A (en)1988-03-251989-11-07Telectronics N.V.Pacemaker with improved automatic output regulation
US4928688A (en)1989-01-231990-05-29Mieczyslaw MirowskiMethod and apparatus for treating hemodynamic disfunction
US4953551A (en)1987-01-141990-09-04Medtronic, Inc.Method of defibrillating a heart
US4979507A (en)1988-05-101990-12-25Eckhard AltEnergy saving cardiac pacemaker
US5000189A (en)1989-11-151991-03-19Regents Of The University Of MichiganMethod and system for monitoring electrocardiographic signals and detecting a pathological cardiac arrhythmia such as ventricular tachycardia
US5033467A (en)1989-08-161991-07-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Combined defibrillator pacer system utilizing pacer tip lead switch
US5036849A (en)1990-04-041991-08-06Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Variable rate cardiac pacer
EP0468720A2 (en)1990-07-241992-01-29Telectronics N.V.Implantable automatic and haemodynamically responsive cardioverting/defibrillating pacemaker with means for minimizing bradycardia support pacing voltages
US5101831A (en)1989-07-071992-04-07Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd.System for discriminating sleep state
US5105354A (en)1989-01-231992-04-14Nippon Kayaku Kabushiki KaishaMethod and apparatus for correlating respiration and heartbeat variability
US5133353A (en)1990-04-251992-07-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable intravenous cardiac stimulation system with pulse generator housing serving as optional additional electrode
US5146918A (en)1991-03-191992-09-15Medtronic, Inc.Demand apnea control of central and obstructive sleep apnea
WO1992017240A1 (en)1991-04-051992-10-15Medtronic, Inc.Subcutaneous multi-electrode sensing system
WO1992020402A1 (en)1991-05-171992-11-26Noel Desmond GrayA pacemaker for a heart
US5170784A (en)1990-11-271992-12-15Ceon RamonLeadless magnetic cardiac pacemaker
US5178156A (en)1989-06-201993-01-12Chest CorporationApnea preventive stimulating device
US5179945A (en)1991-01-171993-01-19Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillation/cardioversion system with multiple evaluation of heart condition prior to shock delivery
US5184615A (en)1991-03-081993-02-09Telectronics Pacing Systems, Inc.Apparatus and method for detecting abnormal cardiac rhythms using evoked potential measurements in an arrhythmia control system
US5187657A (en)1990-04-051993-02-16Hewlett-Packard CompanyCardiac analyzer with rem sleep detection
US5203348A (en)1990-06-061993-04-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous defibrillation electrodes
US5209229A (en)1991-05-201993-05-11Telectronics Pacing Systems, Inc.Apparatus and method employing plural electrode configurations for cardioversion of atrial fibrillation in an arrhythmia control system
US5217021A (en)1991-07-301993-06-08Telectronics Pacing Systems, Inc.Detection of cardiac arrhythmias using correlation of a cardiac electrical signals and temporal data compression
US5222493A (en)1990-10-011993-06-29Siemens Pacesetter, Inc.Verification of capture using an indifferent electrode mounted on the pacemaker connector top
US5230337A (en)1990-06-061993-07-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Process for implanting subcutaneous defibrillation electrodes
US5233983A (en)1991-09-031993-08-10Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for apnea patient screening
EP0560569A2 (en)1992-03-091993-09-15Angemed, Inc.Fibrillation and tachycardia detection
US5261400A (en)1992-02-121993-11-16Medtronic, Inc.Defibrillator employing transvenous and subcutaneous electrodes and method of use
US5271411A (en)1990-09-211993-12-21Colin Electronics Co., Ltd.Method and apparatus for ECG signal analysis and cardiac arrhythmia detection
US5273035A (en)1992-02-031993-12-28Medtronic, Inc.Dual chamber pacemaker with safe airial pacing
US5284136A (en)1990-04-041994-02-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Dual indifferent electrode pacemaker
US5292338A (en)1992-07-301994-03-08Medtronic, Inc.Atrial defibrillator employing transvenous and subcutaneous electrodes and method of use
US5300106A (en)1991-06-071994-04-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Insertion and tunneling tool for a subcutaneous wire patch electrode
US5301677A (en)1992-02-061994-04-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Arrhythmia detector using delta modulated turning point morphology of the ECG wave
US5314430A (en)1993-06-241994-05-24Medtronic, Inc.Atrial defibrillator employing transvenous and subcutaneous electrodes and method of use
US5313953A (en)1992-01-141994-05-24Incontrol, Inc.Implantable cardiac patient monitor
US5314459A (en)1990-01-231994-05-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillation electrode system having smooth current distribution with floating electrode
US5318597A (en)1993-03-151994-06-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Rate adaptive cardiac rhythm management device control algorithm using trans-thoracic ventilation
US5324310A (en)1992-07-011994-06-28Medtronic, Inc.Cardiac pacemaker with auto-capture function
US5331996A (en)1993-10-081994-07-26Ziehm Raymond GDual mode hot water circulation apparatus
US5333095A (en)1993-05-031994-07-26Maxwell Laboratories, Inc., Sierra Capacitor Filter DivisionFeedthrough filter capacitor assembly for human implant
US5334222A (en)1992-11-031994-08-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac stimulating apparatus and method for heart failure therapy
US5335657A (en)1991-05-031994-08-09Cyberonics, Inc.Therapeutic treatment of sleep disorder by nerve stimulation
US5350410A (en)1992-11-231994-09-27Siemens Pacesetter, Inc.Autocapture system for implantable pulse generator
US5353788A (en)1992-09-211994-10-11Miles Laughton ECardio-respiratory control and monitoring system for determining CPAP pressure for apnea treatment
US5366496A (en)1993-04-011994-11-22Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous shunted coil electrode
US5372606A (en)1993-10-071994-12-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for generating adaptive n-phasic defibrillation waveforms
US5374280A (en)1992-02-031994-12-20Medtronic, Inc.Dual chamber pacemaker system and method for delivering atrial sync pulses
US5376476A (en)1993-08-021994-12-27Eylon; DanBattery orientation-indifferent battery receptor
US5376106A (en)1993-10-181994-12-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Multi-sensor blending in a rate responsive cardiac pacemaker
US5391200A (en)1992-09-301995-02-21Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillation patch electrode having conductor-free resilient zone for minimally invasive deployment
US5397342A (en)1993-06-071995-03-14Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Resilient structurally coupled and electrically independent electrodes
US5411031A (en)1993-11-241995-05-02Incontrol, Inc.Implantable cardiac patient monitor
US5411529A (en)1990-08-101995-05-02Medtronic, Inc.Waveform discriminator for cardiac stimulation devices
US5411539A (en)1993-08-311995-05-02Medtronic, Inc.Active can emulator and method of use
US5411533A (en)1991-08-091995-05-02Ela Medical S.A.Method and device for checking stimulation power in a pacemaker
US5411525A (en)1992-01-301995-05-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Dual capacitor biphasic defibrillator waveform generator employing selective connection of capacitors for each phase
US5431693A (en)1993-12-101995-07-11Intermedics, Inc.Method of verifying capture of the heart by a pacemaker
US5439482A (en)1992-04-071995-08-08Angeion CorporationProphylactic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US5441518A (en)1993-07-221995-08-15Angeion CorporationImplantable cardioverter defibrillator system having independently controllable electrode discharge pathway
US5443485A (en)1993-09-081995-08-22Intermedics, Inc.Apparatus and method for capture detection in a cardiac stimulator
US5447519A (en)1994-03-191995-09-05Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for discrimination of monomorphic and polymorphic arrhythmias and for treatment thereof
US5468254A (en)1993-07-261995-11-21Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for defibrillation using a multiphasic truncated exponential waveform
US5485851A (en)1994-09-211996-01-23Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for arousal detection
US5517983A (en)1992-12-091996-05-21Puritan Bennett CorporationCompliance meter for respiratory therapy
US5520191A (en)1994-10-071996-05-28Ortivus Medical AbMyocardial ischemia and infarction analysis and monitoring method and apparatus
US5522860A (en)1993-12-311996-06-04Ela Medical S.A.Control of an active implantable medical device
US5531779A (en)1992-10-011996-07-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Stent-type defibrillation electrode structures
US5534017A (en)1994-12-021996-07-09Vitatron Medical, B.V.Dual chamber pacemaker system with improved response to retrograde conduction
US5540732A (en)1994-09-211996-07-30Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for impedance detecting and treating obstructive airway disorders
US5540727A (en)1994-11-151996-07-30Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus to automatically optimize the pacing mode and pacing cycle parameters of a dual chamber pacemaker
US5545186A (en)1995-03-301996-08-13Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias
US5549655A (en)1994-09-211996-08-27Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for synchronized treatment of obstructive sleep apnea
US5591216A (en)1995-05-191997-01-07Medtronic, Inc.Method for treatment of sleep apnea by electrical stimulation
US5620466A (en)1995-08-141997-04-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Digital AGC using separate gain control and threshold templating
US5626620A (en)1995-02-211997-05-06Medtronic, Inc.Dual chamber pacing system and method with continual adjustment of the AV escape interval so as to maintain optimized ventricular pacing for treating cardiomyopathy
US5634938A (en)1992-01-301997-06-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillator waveform generator for generating waveform of long duration
US5641326A (en)1993-12-131997-06-24Angeion CorporationMethod and apparatus for independent atrial and ventricular defibrillation
US5650759A (en)1995-11-091997-07-22Hittman Materials & Medical Components, Inc.Filtered feedthrough assembly having a mounted chip capacitor for medical implantable devices and method of manufacture therefor
US5658318A (en)1994-06-241997-08-19Pacesetter AbMethod and apparatus for detecting a state of imminent cardiac arrhythmia in response to a nerve signal from the autonomic nerve system to the heart, and for administrating anti-arrhythmia therapy in response thereto
US5662688A (en)1995-08-141997-09-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Slow gain control
US5674254A (en)1995-05-221997-10-07Vitatron Medical, B.V.Cardiac pacemaker system and method for determining a measure of pacing threshold without incurring loss of capture
US5683434A (en)1996-12-061997-11-04Pacesetter, Inc.Microstrip EMI shunt for an implantable medical device
US5683431A (en)1996-03-271997-11-04Medtronic, Inc.Verification of capture by sensing evoked response across cardioversion electrodes
US5697956A (en)1995-06-021997-12-16Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable stimulation device having means for optimizing current drain
US5697953A (en)1993-03-131997-12-16Angeion CorporationImplantable cardioverter defibrillator having a smaller displacement volume
US5704365A (en)1994-11-141998-01-06Cambridge Heart, Inc.Using related signals to reduce ECG noise
US5713933A (en)1994-11-301998-02-03Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for automatic pacing threshold determination
US5718720A (en)1996-12-131998-02-17Sulzer Intermedics Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulator with capture detection and impedance based autotuning of capture detection
US5724984A (en)1995-01-261998-03-10Cambridge Heart, Inc.Multi-segment ECG electrode and system
US5735883A (en)1996-12-131998-04-07Sulzer Intermedics Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulator with impedance based autothreshold
US5738102A (en)1994-03-311998-04-14Lemelson; Jerome H.Patient monitoring system
US5779645A (en)1996-12-171998-07-14Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for waveform morphology comparison
US5814087A (en)1996-12-181998-09-29Medtronic, Inc.Rate responsive pacemaker adapted to adjust lower rate limit according to monitored patient blood temperature
US5817027A (en)1995-11-291998-10-06Hewlett-Packard CompanyMethod and apparatus for classifying heartbeats in an ECG waveform
US5827326A (en)1991-03-151998-10-27Angeion CorporationImplantable cardioverter defibrillator having a smaller energy storage capacity
US5836987A (en)1995-11-151998-11-17Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for optimizing cardiac performance by determining the optimal timing interval from an accelerometer signal
US5844506A (en)1994-04-051998-12-01Binstead; Ronald PeterMultiple input proximity detector and touchpad system
US5857977A (en)1996-08-081999-01-12The Regents Of The University Of MichiganMethod and apparatus for separation of ventricular tachycardia from ventricular fibrillation for implantable cardioverter defibrillators
US5861011A (en)1997-02-141999-01-19Vitatron Medical, B.V.Pacemaker with automatic lower rate limit drop
US5861013A (en)1997-04-291999-01-19Medtronic Inc.Peak tracking capture detection circuit and method
US5860918A (en)1996-11-221999-01-19Hewlett-Packard CompanyRepresentation of a review of a patent's physiological parameters
WO1999004841A1 (en)1997-07-251999-02-04Minnesota Innovative Technologies & Instruments Corporation (Miti)Control device for supplying supplemental respiratory oxygen
US5871512A (en)1997-04-291999-02-16Medtronic, Inc.Microprocessor capture detection circuit and method
US5876353A (en)1997-01-311999-03-02Medtronic, Inc.Impedance monitor for discerning edema through evaluation of respiratory rate
US5895414A (en)1996-04-191999-04-20Sanchez-Zambrano; SergioPacemaker housing
US5916243A (en)1992-11-241999-06-29Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable conformal coil patch electrode with multiple conductive elements for cardioversion and defibrillation
US5944680A (en)1996-06-261999-08-31Medtronic, Inc.Respiratory effort detection method and apparatus
EP0940155A2 (en)1998-02-041999-09-08Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus for management of sleep apnea
US5957956A (en)1994-06-211999-09-28Angeion CorpImplantable cardioverter defibrillator having a smaller mass
US5964778A (en)1998-03-171999-10-12Medtronic, Inc.Balloon attachment at catheter tip
US5974340A (en)1997-04-291999-10-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for monitoring respiratory function in heart failure patients to determine efficacy of therapy
US5987352A (en)1996-07-111999-11-16Medtronic, Inc.Minimally invasive implantable device for monitoring physiologic events
WO2000001438A1 (en)1998-07-062000-01-13Ela Medical S.A.An active implantable medical device for treating sleep apnea syndrome by electrostimulation
US6026320A (en)1998-06-082000-02-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Heart rate variability as an indicator of exercise capacity
US6038474A (en)*1999-03-022000-03-14Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Pseudo-fusion management during automatic capture verification
US6044298A (en)1998-10-132000-03-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Optimization of pacing parameters based on measurement of integrated acoustic noise
WO2000017615A2 (en)1998-09-232000-03-30Keith BridgerPhysiological sensing device
US6045513A (en)1998-05-132000-04-04Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device for tracking patient functional status
US6049730A (en)1998-12-282000-04-11Flaga HfMethod and apparatus for improving the accuracy of interpretation of ECG-signals
US6052620A (en)1996-05-142000-04-18Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias
US6055454A (en)1998-07-272000-04-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacemaker with automatic response optimization of a physiologic sensor based on a second sensor
US6064910A (en)1996-11-252000-05-16Pacesetter AbRespirator rate/respiration depth detector and device for monitoring respiratory activity employing same
US6076014A (en)1997-08-012000-06-13Sulzer Intermedics, Inc.Cardiac stimulator and defibrillator with means for identifying cardiac rhythm disorder and chamber of origin
US6076015A (en)1998-02-272000-06-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Rate adaptive cardiac rhythm management device using transthoracic impedance
US6084253A (en)1999-03-012000-07-04Teccor Electronics, LpLow voltage four-layer device with offset buried region
US6091973A (en)1995-04-112000-07-18Resmed LimitedMonitoring the occurrence of apneic and hypopneic arousals
US6101416A (en)1998-07-292000-08-08Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for atrial autocapture in single-chamber pacemaker modes using far-field detection
US6115628A (en)1999-03-292000-09-05Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for filtering electrocardiogram (ECG) signals to remove bad cycle information and for use of physiologic signals determined from said filtered ECG signals
US6120441A (en)1995-10-162000-09-19Map Medizintechnik Fur Arzt Und Patient GmbhMethod and device for quantitative analysis of sleep disturbances
EP1038498A2 (en)1999-03-252000-09-27St. George's Enterprises LimitedMethods of characterising ventricular operation and applications thereof
US6128534A (en)1998-06-162000-10-03Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device and method for varying pacing parameters to mimic circadian cycles
US6128535A (en)1997-12-052000-10-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic capture verification in multisite cardiac pacing
US6132384A (en)1996-06-262000-10-17Medtronic, Inc.Sensor, method of sensor implant and system for treatment of respiratory disorders
US6148230A (en)1998-01-302000-11-14Uab Research FoundationMethod for the monitoring and treatment of spontaneous cardiac arrhythmias
US6147680A (en)1997-06-032000-11-14Koa T&T CorporationTouchpad with interleaved traces
US6148234A (en)1998-09-282000-11-14Medtronic Inc.Dual site pacing system with automatic pulse output adjustment
US6163724A (en)1998-09-182000-12-19Medtronic, Inc.Microprocessor capture detection circuit and method
US6169921B1 (en)1998-12-082001-01-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Autocapture determination for an implantable cardioverter defibrillator
US6175766B1 (en)1999-03-302001-01-16Pacesetter, Inc.Cardiac pacemaker autothreshold arrangement and method with reliable capture
US6192275B1 (en)1999-05-112001-02-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Adaptive evoked response sensing for automatic capture verification
US6190326B1 (en)1999-04-232001-02-20Medtrac Technologies, Inc.Method and apparatus for obtaining patient respiratory data
US6221011B1 (en)1999-07-262001-04-24Cardiac Intelligence CorporationSystem and method for determining a reference baseline of individual patient status for use in an automated collection and analysis patient care system
US6226551B1 (en)1999-05-112001-05-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Wide-band evoked response sensing for capture verification
US6227072B1 (en)1998-10-022001-05-08Ritchey Designs, Inc.Light weight bicycle pedal
US6238419B1 (en)1997-02-052001-05-29Pacesetter AbHeart stimulating device having fusion and pseudofusion heartbeat detection capability
US6253102B1 (en)1998-03-252001-06-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System for displaying cardiac arrhythmia data
US6251126B1 (en)1998-04-232001-06-26Medtronic IncMethod and apparatus for synchronized treatment of obstructive sleep apnea
US6258039B1 (en)1998-01-192001-07-10Nippon Sanso CorporationRespiratory gas consumption monitoring device and monitoring method
US6266554B1 (en)1999-02-122001-07-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System and method for classifying cardiac complexes
US6270457B1 (en)1999-06-032001-08-07Cardiac Intelligence Corp.System and method for automated collection and analysis of regularly retrieved patient information for remote patient care
US6272377B1 (en)1999-10-012001-08-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management system with arrhythmia prediction and prevention
US6280462B1 (en)1990-04-252001-08-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable intravenous cardiac stimulation system with pulse generator housing serving as optional additional electrode
US6282440B1 (en)1999-12-312001-08-28Ge Marquette Medical Systems, Inc.Method to identify electrode placement
US6285907B1 (en)1999-05-212001-09-04Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System providing ventricular pacing and biventricular coordination
US6295330B1 (en)1998-08-052001-09-25Siemens-Elema AbDevice for repeated registration of the number of thermal cycles to which a part for medical usage has been subjected
US6299581B1 (en)1992-05-072001-10-09New York UniversityMethod and apparatus for optimizing the continuous positive airway pressure for treating obstructive sleep apnea
US6312378B1 (en)1999-06-032001-11-06Cardiac Intelligence CorporationSystem and method for automated collection and analysis of patient information retrieved from an implantable medical device for remote patient care
US6312388B1 (en)1999-03-122001-11-06Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for verifying the integrity of normal sinus rhythm templates
EP1151718A2 (en)2000-05-052001-11-07Pacesetter, Inc.Apparatus for monitoring heart failure via respiratory patterns
US6324427B1 (en)*1999-01-262001-11-27Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device having T-wave discrimination of fusion events during autocapture/autothreshold assessment
US6324421B1 (en)1999-03-292001-11-27Medtronic, Inc.Axis shift analysis of electrocardiogram signal parameters especially applicable for multivector analysis by implantable medical devices, and use of same
US20010049542A1 (en)2000-05-112001-12-06Florio Joseph J.System and method for automatically verifying capture during multi-chamber stimulation
US20020002327A1 (en)2000-04-102002-01-03Grant Brydon J.B.Method for detecting cheyne-stokes respiration in patients with congestive heart failure
US6336903B1 (en)1999-11-162002-01-08Cardiac Intelligence Corp.Automated collection and analysis patient care system and method for diagnosing and monitoring congestive heart failure and outcomes thereof
US6345201B1 (en)1998-07-292002-02-05Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for ventricular capture using far-field evoked response
US6351669B1 (en)1999-05-212002-02-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management system promoting atrial pacing
US6351673B1 (en)1998-05-082002-02-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing using adjustable atrio-ventricular delays
US20020035379A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Bardy Gust H.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with improved installation characteristics
US20020035381A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode with improved contact shape for transthoracic conduction
US20020035377A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with insertion tool
US20020035378A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with highly maneuverable insertion tool
US6363281B1 (en)2000-05-162002-03-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management system and method
US6368284B1 (en)1999-11-162002-04-09Cardiac Intelligence CorporationAutomated collection and analysis patient care system and method for diagnosing and monitoring myocardial ischemia and outcomes thereof
US6368287B1 (en)1998-01-082002-04-09S.L.P. Ltd.Integrated sleep apnea screening system
US6371922B1 (en)2000-04-072002-04-16Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method for measuring baroreflex sensitivity and therapy optimization in heart failure patients
US6375621B1 (en)1987-03-062002-04-23Ocean Laboratories, Inc.Passive apnea monitor
US20020052631A1 (en)2000-06-192002-05-02Sullivan Joseph L.Method and apparatus using a time measurement to an electrical parameter threshold to determine a defibrillation pulse duration
US6393316B1 (en)1999-05-122002-05-21Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for detection and treatment of cardiac arrhythmias
WO2002040097A1 (en)2000-11-172002-05-23St. Jude Medical AbA cardiac stimulating device
US6398728B1 (en)1999-11-162002-06-04Cardiac Intelligence CorporationAutomated collection and analysis patient care system and method for diagnosing and monitoring respiratory insufficiency and outcomes thereof
WO2002047761A2 (en)2000-12-142002-06-20Medtronic, Inc.Atrial aware vvi: a method for atrial synchronous ventricular (vdd/r) pacing using the subcutaneous electrode array and a standard pacing lead
US6409675B1 (en)1999-11-102002-06-25Pacesetter, Inc.Extravascular hemodynamic monitor
US20020082658A1 (en)2000-11-222002-06-27Heinrich Stephen D.Apparatus for detecting and treating ventricular arrhythmia
US6415183B1 (en)1999-12-092002-07-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for diaphragmatic pacing
US6415174B1 (en)1998-11-092002-07-02Board Of Regents The University Of Texas SystemECG derived respiratory rhythms for improved diagnosis of sleep apnea
US6418343B1 (en)1999-10-012002-07-09Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for adjusting the sensing threshold of a cardiac rhythm management device
US6418340B1 (en)1999-08-202002-07-09Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for identifying and displaying groups of cardiac arrhythmic episodes
US20020095184A1 (en)2000-09-182002-07-18Bardy Gust H.Monophasic waveform for anti-tachycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US6424234B1 (en)1998-09-182002-07-23Greatbatch-Sierra, Inc.Electromagnetic interference (emi) filter and process for providing electromagnetic compatibility of an electronic device while in the presence of an electromagnetic emitter operating at the same frequency
US6424865B1 (en)2000-07-132002-07-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Ventricular conduction delay trending system and method
US20020107544A1 (en)2000-09-182002-08-08Cameron Health, Inc.Current waveform for anti-bradycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US20020107545A1 (en)2000-09-182002-08-08Cameron Health, Inc.Power supply for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US6434428B1 (en)1998-07-292002-08-13Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for optimizing far-field R-wave sensing by switching electrode polarity during atrial capture verification
US6434417B1 (en)2000-03-282002-08-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for detecting cardiac depolarization
US6440066B1 (en)1999-11-162002-08-27Cardiac Intelligence CorporationAutomated collection and analysis patient care system and method for ordering and prioritizing multiple health disorders to identify an index disorder
US6449503B1 (en)1999-07-142002-09-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Classification of supraventricular and ventricular cardiac rhythms using cross channel timing algorithm
US6456880B1 (en)2000-05-012002-09-24Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device for and method of monitoring progression or regression of a patient's heart condition by monitoring ventricular repolarization interval dispersion
US6456481B1 (en)2001-05-312002-09-24Greatbatch-Sierra, Inc.Integrated EMI filter-DC blocking capacitor
US6456881B1 (en)2000-08-022002-09-24Pacesetter, Inc.System and method of identifying fusion for dual-chamber automatic capture stimulation device
US20020138111A1 (en)2001-01-172002-09-26Biotronik Mess-Und Therapiegeraete Gmbh & Co.Stimulation arrangement with stimulation success monitoring
US6459929B1 (en)1999-11-042002-10-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable cardiac rhythm management device for assessing status of CHF patients
US6466820B1 (en)1998-12-292002-10-15Medtronic, Inc.Multi-site cardiac pacing system having trigger pace window
US6477422B1 (en)2000-03-222002-11-05Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for capture detection
WO2002087696A1 (en)2001-04-302002-11-07Medtronic,Inc.Transcutaneous monitor and method of use, using therapeutic output from an implanted medical device
US6480734B1 (en)2000-06-302002-11-12Cardiac Science Inc.Cardiac arrhythmia detector using ECG waveform-factor and its irregularity
US6480733B1 (en)1999-11-102002-11-12Pacesetter, Inc.Method for monitoring heart failure
US6493586B1 (en)2000-08-302002-12-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Site reversion in cardiac rhythm management
US6491639B1 (en)1999-11-102002-12-10Pacesetter, Inc.Extravascular hemodynamic sensor
US6496715B1 (en)1996-07-112002-12-17Medtronic, Inc.System and method for non-invasive determination of optimal orientation of an implantable sensing device
US6505071B1 (en)1999-12-152003-01-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac management device with capability of noise detection in automatic capture verification
US6505067B1 (en)2000-11-222003-01-07Medtronic, Inc.System and method for deriving a virtual ECG or EGM signal
WO2003003905A2 (en)2001-07-052003-01-16Softmax, Inc.System and method for separating cardiac signals
US6512940B1 (en)2000-10-312003-01-28Medtronic, Inc.Subcutaneous spiral electrode for sensing electrical signals of the heart
US20030023175A1 (en)2001-05-222003-01-30Arzbaecher Robert C.Implantable cardiac arrest monitor and alarm system
US6522915B1 (en)2000-10-262003-02-18Medtronic, Inc.Surround shroud connector and electrode housings for a subcutaneous electrode array and leadless ECGS
EP1291038A2 (en)2001-09-102003-03-12Pacesetter, Inc.Pacemaker with enhanced capture tracking
WO2003028550A2 (en)2001-10-032003-04-10Qinetiq LimitedApparatus for monitoring fetal heart-beat
US6553259B2 (en)2001-03-142003-04-22Pacesetter, Inc.System and method of performing automatic capture in an implantable cardiac stimulation device
US20030083710A1 (en)2001-10-262003-05-01David TernesMethod and apparatus for capture verification and threshold determination
US20030083711A1 (en)2001-10-262003-05-01Yonce David J.Template-based capture verification for multi-site pacing
US6564106B2 (en)2000-12-132003-05-13Medtronic, Inc.Thin film electrodes for sensing cardiac depolarization signals
US6567701B2 (en)2000-12-212003-05-20Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for discriminating captured beats from non-captured beats in a cardiac pacing system
US20030135248A1 (en)2002-01-112003-07-17Medtronic, Inc.Variation of neural-stimulation parameters
US6597951B2 (en)2001-03-162003-07-22Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic selection from multiple cardiac optimization protocols
US6595927B2 (en)2001-07-232003-07-22Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for diagnosing and administering therapy of pulmonary congestion
US6600949B1 (en)1999-11-102003-07-29Pacesetter, Inc.Method for monitoring heart failure via respiratory patterns
US6607509B2 (en)1997-12-312003-08-19Medtronic Minimed, Inc.Insertion device for an insertion set and method of using the same
US6611712B2 (en)2000-12-262003-08-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for testing and adjusting a bipolar stimulation configuration
US6615089B1 (en)2000-03-312003-09-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System and method for verifying capture in a multi-site pacemaker
US6615083B2 (en)2001-04-272003-09-02Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device system with sensor for hemodynamic stability and method of use
US6615082B1 (en)2000-05-152003-09-02Pacesetter, Inc.Method and device for optimally altering stimulation energy to maintain capture of cardiac tissue
US6618619B1 (en)2000-05-122003-09-09Pacesetter, Inc.Method and apparatus for reducing the effect of evoked responses on polarization measurements in an automatic capture pacing system
US6622046B2 (en)2001-05-072003-09-16Medtronic, Inc.Subcutaneous sensing feedthrough/electrode assembly
US6631290B1 (en)2000-10-252003-10-07Medtronic, Inc.Multilayer ceramic electrodes for sensing cardiac depolarization signals
US20030195571A1 (en)2002-04-122003-10-16Burnes John E.Method and apparatus for the treatment of central sleep apnea using biventricular pacing
US20030199945A1 (en)2002-02-112003-10-23James CiullaDevice and method for treating disordered breathing
US6640136B1 (en)2001-09-122003-10-28Pacesetters, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device with automatic electrode selection for avoiding cross-chamber stimulation
US20030204213A1 (en)2002-04-302003-10-30Jensen Donald N.Method and apparatus to detect and monitor the frequency of obstructive sleep apnea
US6641542B2 (en)2001-04-302003-11-04Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus to detect and treat sleep respiratory events
US6654637B2 (en)2001-04-302003-11-25Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for ventricular fusion prevention
US6658293B2 (en)2001-04-272003-12-02Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for atrial capture detection based on far-field R-wave sensing
US6684100B1 (en)2000-10-312004-01-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Curvature based method for selecting features from an electrophysiologic signals for purpose of complex identification and classification
US6690967B2 (en)2000-08-032004-02-10Draeger Medical System, Inc.Electrocardiogram system for synthesizing leads and providing an accuracy measure
US6701170B2 (en)2001-11-022004-03-02Nellcor Puritan Bennett IncorporatedBlind source separation of pulse oximetry signals
US6708058B2 (en)2001-04-302004-03-16Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Normal cardiac rhythm template generation system and method
US6725085B2 (en)2000-09-222004-04-20Armin SchwartzmanMethod and apparatus for characterizing cardiac tissue from local electrograms
US6731983B2 (en)2001-10-302004-05-04Medtronic, Inc.Pacemaker having adaptive arrhythmia detection windows
US6731985B2 (en)2001-10-162004-05-04Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation system and method for automatic capture verification calibration
US6731984B2 (en)2001-06-072004-05-04Medtronic, Inc.Method for providing a therapy to a patient involving modifying the therapy after detecting an onset of sleep in the patient, and implantable medical device embodying same
US6731973B2 (en)2001-06-122004-05-04Ge Medical Systems Information Technologies, Inc.Method and apparatus for processing physiological data
US6738668B1 (en)2001-11-012004-05-18Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device having a capture assurance system which minimizes battery current drain and method for operating the same
US20040116978A1 (en)2002-12-062004-06-17Kerry BradleyMethod for determining stimulation parameters
US6754528B2 (en)2001-11-212004-06-22Cameraon Health, Inc.Apparatus and method of arrhythmia detection in a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter/defibrillator
US6754523B2 (en)2000-11-282004-06-22J. Gerald TooleMethod of analysis of the electrocardiogram
US20040127950A1 (en)2002-12-312004-07-01Jaeho KimCapture verification using an evoked response reference
US6760615B2 (en)2001-10-312004-07-06Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for discriminating between tachyarrhythmias
US6766190B2 (en)2001-10-312004-07-20Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for developing a vectorcardiograph in an implantable medical device
US6768923B2 (en)2001-12-052004-07-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for ventricular pacing triggered by detection of early ventricular excitation
US6768924B2 (en)2002-01-032004-07-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for capture verification based on propagated electrical activity
US6772008B2 (en)2001-09-282004-08-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for avoidance of phrenic nerve stimulation during cardiac pacing
US6773404B2 (en)2001-12-072004-08-10Ela Medical S.A.Discriminating between an awake phase and a sleep phase of a patient in an active implantable medical device
US6778860B2 (en)2001-11-052004-08-17Cameron Health, Inc.Switched capacitor defibrillation circuit
US20040172065A1 (en)2003-02-282004-09-02Sih Haris J.Cardiac therapy triggered by capture verification
US6788974B2 (en)2000-09-182004-09-07Cameron Health, Inc.Radian curve shaped implantable cardioverter-defibrillator canister
US20040215253A1 (en)2003-04-242004-10-28Weinberg Lisa P.Implantable cardiac stimulation device providing atrial accelerated arrhythmia termination electrode configuration selection and method
WO2004091720A2 (en)2003-04-112004-10-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous cardiac device
US20040215277A1 (en)2003-04-252004-10-28Peter OosterhoffDynamic pacing interval extension for detection of intrinsic ventricular activity
US20040230229A1 (en)2003-04-112004-11-18Lovett Eric G.Hybrid transthoracic/intrathoracic cardiac stimulation devices and methods
US20040243014A1 (en)2003-05-282004-12-02Kent LeeCardiac waveform template creation, maintenance and use
US6830548B2 (en)2001-09-242004-12-14Ela Medical S.A.Active medical device able to diagnose a patient respiratory profile
US6834204B2 (en)2001-11-052004-12-21Cameron Health, Inc.Method and apparatus for inducing defibrillation in a patient using a T-shock waveform
US20040260351A1 (en)2003-06-232004-12-23Nils HolmstromEvoked response detector
US20050004612A1 (en)2003-04-252005-01-06Medtronic, Inc.Form analysis to detect evoked response
US6856835B2 (en)2000-09-182005-02-15Cameron Health, Inc.Biphasic waveform for anti-tachycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US20050038478A1 (en)2003-08-112005-02-17Klepfer Ruth N.Activation recovery interval for classification of cardiac beats in an implanted device
US20050043652A1 (en)2003-08-182005-02-24Lovett Eric G. Sleep state classification
US6865417B2 (en)2001-11-052005-03-08Cameron Health, Inc.H-bridge with sensing circuit
US6866044B2 (en)2000-09-182005-03-15Cameron Health, Inc.Method of insertion and implantation of implantable cardioverter-defibrillator canisters
US20050065587A1 (en)2003-09-242005-03-24Mark GryzwaImplantable lead with magnetic jacket
US6881192B1 (en)2002-06-122005-04-19Pacesetter, Inc.Measurement of sleep apnea duration and evaluation of response therapies using duration metrics
US20050085865A1 (en)2003-10-152005-04-21Tehrani Amir J.Breathing disorder detection and therapy delivery device and method
US6885893B1 (en)2002-03-252005-04-26Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable stimulation device and method for performing inter-chamber conduction search and conduction time measurement
US6884218B2 (en)2002-12-092005-04-26Charles W. OlsonThree dimensional vector cardiograph and method for detecting and monitoring ischemic events
US6888538B2 (en)1994-05-142005-05-03Synaptics (Uk) LimitedPosition sensor
US6889079B2 (en)2002-04-122005-05-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for characterizing supraventricular rhythm during cardiac pacing
US6890306B2 (en)2001-12-142005-05-10Ela Medical S.A.Active medical device for the diagnosis of the sleep apnea syndrome
US6895274B2 (en)1996-08-192005-05-17The Mower Family Chf Treatment Irrevocable TrustAntitachycardial pacing
US20050107839A1 (en)2003-11-132005-05-19Sanders Richard S.Implantable cardiac monitor upgradeable to pacemaker or cardiac resynchronization device
US20050113710A1 (en)2003-09-182005-05-26Stahmann Jeffrey E.Implantable device employing movement sensing for detecting sleep-related disorders
US6904320B2 (en)2002-02-142005-06-07Pacesetter, Inc.Sleep apnea therapy device using dynamic overdrive pacing
US20050131478A1 (en)2003-12-122005-06-16Jaeho KimCardiac response classification using multisite sensing and pacing
US20050131477A1 (en)2003-12-122005-06-16Meyer Scott A.Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
WO2005058412A2 (en)2003-12-112005-06-30Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using multiple classification windows
US6915164B2 (en)2002-04-162005-07-05Pacesetter, Inc.Automatic capture using independent channels in bi-chamber stimulation
US6915160B2 (en)2002-02-082005-07-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Dynamically optimized multisite cardiac resynchronization device
US6917832B2 (en)2001-06-142005-07-12Biotronik Mess- Und Therapiegeraete Gmbh & Co. Ingenieurbuero BerlinStimulation apparatus
US6925330B2 (en)2002-07-102005-08-02Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable medical device and method for detecting cardiac events without using of refractory or blanking periods
US6925324B2 (en)2000-05-302005-08-02Vladimir ShustermanSystem and device for multi-scale analysis and representation of physiological data
US6927721B2 (en)2001-11-052005-08-09Cameron Health, Inc.Low power A/D converter
US6928324B2 (en)2002-02-142005-08-09Pacesetter, Inc.Stimulation device for sleep apnea prevention, detection and treatment
US6937907B2 (en)2000-09-182005-08-30Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with low-profile installation appendage and method of doing same
US6944495B2 (en)2000-11-102005-09-13C.R. Bard, Inc.Methods for processing electrocardiac signals having superimposed complexes
US6944579B2 (en)2000-11-012005-09-13International Business Machines CorporationSignal separation method, signal processing apparatus, image processing apparatus, medical image processing apparatus and storage medium for restoring multidimensional signals from observed data in which multiple signals are mixed
US6950702B2 (en)2002-07-152005-09-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Use of curvature based features for beat detection
US6950705B2 (en)2000-09-182005-09-27Cameron Health, Inc.Canister designs for implantable cardioverter-defibrillators
WO2005089865A1 (en)2004-03-172005-09-29Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus and methods of energy efficient, atrial-based bi-ventricular fusion-pacing
US6952610B2 (en)2000-09-182005-10-04Cameron Health, Inc.Current waveforms for anti-tachycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter- defibrillator
US6952608B2 (en)2001-11-052005-10-04Cameron Health, Inc.Defibrillation pacing circuitry
US6954670B2 (en)2001-11-052005-10-11Cameron Health, Inc.Simplified defibrillator output circuit
US6959214B2 (en)2001-11-282005-10-25Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device for measuring mechanical heart function
US6961619B2 (en)2000-08-292005-11-01Casey Don ESubcutaneously implantable power supply
US6961613B2 (en)2002-12-162005-11-01St. Jude Medical AbImplantable bi-ventricular stimulation device and system, and bi-ventricular stimulation and sensing method
US6973350B1 (en)2003-03-312005-12-06Pacesetter, Inc.Diagnosis of atrial fusion, atrial pseudofusion and/or native atrial activity
US6975904B1 (en)2001-11-082005-12-13Pacesetter, Inc.Modification of evoked response detection algorithm based on orientation and activity of patient
US6978178B2 (en)2002-04-302005-12-20Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for selecting an optimal electrode configuration of a medical electrical lead having a multiple electrode array
US20050288600A1 (en)2004-06-242005-12-29Yi ZhangAutomatic orientation determination for ECG measurements using multiple electrodes
US6983264B2 (en)2000-11-012006-01-03International Business Machines CorporationSignal separation method and apparatus for restoring original signal from observed data
US6988003B2 (en)2000-09-182006-01-17Cameron Health, Inc.Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator having two spaced apart shocking electrodes on housing
US6993389B2 (en)2001-03-302006-01-31Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Identifying heart failure patients suitable for resynchronization therapy using QRS complex width from an intracardiac electrogram
US6993379B1 (en)2002-12-302006-01-31Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for emulating a surface EKG using an implantable cardiac stimulation device
US6999817B2 (en)2002-02-142006-02-14Packsetter, Inc.Cardiac stimulation device including sleep apnea prevention and treatment
EP1629863A1 (en)2004-08-272006-03-01Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for determining optimal atrioventricular delay based on intrinsic conduction delays
US20060069322A1 (en)2004-09-302006-03-30Yi ZhangCardiac activation sequence monitoring and tracking
US20060074331A1 (en)2004-09-302006-04-06Jaeho KimArrhythmia classification and therapy selection
US7027871B2 (en)2002-10-312006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.Aggregation of data from external data sources within an implantable medical device
US7027861B2 (en)2001-10-092006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for affecting atrial defibrillation with bi-atrial pacing
US7025730B2 (en)2003-01-102006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.System and method for automatically monitoring and delivering therapy for sleep-related disordered breathing
US7027868B2 (en)2001-10-302006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.Capture management improvements
US7031773B1 (en)2003-01-102006-04-18Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation system providing autocapture and lead impedance assessment and method
US7039465B2 (en)2000-09-182006-05-02Cameron Health, Inc.Ceramics and/or other material insulated shell for active and non-active S-ICD can
US7039459B2 (en)2000-09-182006-05-02Cameron Health, Inc.Cardioverter-defibrillator having a focused shocking area and orientation thereof
US7043299B2 (en)2000-09-182006-05-09Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator employing a telescoping lead
US7050851B2 (en)2001-06-292006-05-23Medtronic, Inc.Implantable cardioverter/defibrillator with housing electrode and lead detection and switching circuitry
US20060111747A1 (en)2004-11-232006-05-25Cazares Shelley MCardiac template generation based on patient response information
US20060116593A1 (en)2004-11-302006-06-01Yi ZhangCardiac activation sequence monitoring for ischemia detection
US7062327B2 (en)2002-05-022006-06-13Pacesetter, Inc.Method and apparatus for providing atrial autocapture in a dynamic atrial overdrive pacing system for use in an implantable cardiac stimulation device
US20060129199A1 (en)2004-12-152006-06-15Geng ZhangAtrial retrograde management
US20060129196A1 (en)2004-12-132006-06-15Yanting DongCapture verification with intrinsic response discrimination
US20060129193A1 (en)2004-12-152006-06-15Geng ZhangTemplate initialization for evoked response detection
US20060129194A1 (en)2004-12-152006-06-15Geng ZhangCardiac pacing response classification using an adaptable classification interval
US7065407B2 (en)2000-09-182006-06-20Cameron Health, Inc.Duckbill-shaped implantable cardioverter-defibrillator canister and method of use
US7065400B2 (en)2003-08-202006-06-20Pacesetter, Inc.Method and apparatus for automatically programming CRT devices
WO2006065707A2 (en)2004-12-152006-06-22Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac capture verification and retrograde management
US7079988B2 (en)2003-04-012006-07-18ThalesMethod for the higher-order blind identification of mixtures of sources
US7081095B2 (en)2001-05-172006-07-25Lynn Lawrence ACentralized hospital monitoring system for automatically detecting upper airway instability and for preventing and aborting adverse drug reactions
US7085599B2 (en)2002-10-232006-08-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Characterization of supraventricular rhythm using collected cardiac beats
US7090682B2 (en)2000-09-182006-08-15Cameron Health, Inc.Method and apparatus for extraction of a subcutaneous electrode
US7096064B2 (en)2001-08-282006-08-22Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device for treating cardiac mechanical dysfunction by electrical stimulation
US7094207B1 (en)2004-03-022006-08-22Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for diagnosing and tracking congestive heart failure based on the periodicity of cheyne-stokes respiration using an implantable medical device
US7103404B2 (en)2003-02-272006-09-05Medtronic,Inc.Detection of tachyarrhythmia termination
US7107093B2 (en)2003-04-292006-09-12Medtronic, Inc.Use of activation and recovery times and dispersions to monitor heart failure status and arrhythmia risk
US7113823B2 (en)2001-10-262006-09-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Morphology-based optimization of cardiac resynchronization therapy
US7115097B2 (en)2003-10-092006-10-03Johnson Joseph LPositive airway pressure notification system for treatment of breathing disorders during sleep
US7117036B2 (en)2002-06-272006-10-03Pacesetter, Inc.Using activity-based rest disturbance as a metric of sleep apnea
US7120495B2 (en)2000-09-182006-10-10Cameron Health, Inc.Flexible subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US7123960B2 (en)2003-12-222006-10-17Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for delivering cardiac resynchronization therapy with variable atrio-ventricular delay
US7127290B2 (en)1999-10-012006-10-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management systems and methods predicting congestive heart failure status
US7129935B2 (en)2003-06-022006-10-31Synaptics IncorporatedSensor patterns for a capacitive sensing apparatus
US20060247693A1 (en)2005-04-282006-11-02Yanting DongNon-captured intrinsic discrimination in cardiac pacing response classification
US20060247695A1 (en)2005-04-282006-11-02Stalsberg Kevin JMethods and systems for managing fusion and noise in cardiac pacing response classification
US20060253043A1 (en)2005-05-092006-11-09Yi ZhangPosture monitoring using cardiac activation sequences
US20060253044A1 (en)2005-05-092006-11-09Yi ZhangArrhythmia discrimination using electrocardiograms sensed from multiple implanted electrodes
US7139610B2 (en)2002-04-262006-11-21Medtronic, Inc.Capture management in multi-site pacing
US7146212B2 (en)2000-09-182006-12-05Cameron Health, Inc.Anti-bradycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US7144586B2 (en)2000-03-292006-12-05Lycored Natural Products Industries Ltd.Compositions for preventing hormone induced adverse effects
US7149575B2 (en)2000-09-182006-12-12Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous cardiac stimulator device having an anteriorly positioned electrode
US7155278B2 (en)2003-04-212006-12-26Medtronic, Inc.Neurostimulation to treat effects of sleep apnea
US7160252B2 (en)2003-01-102007-01-09Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for detecting respiratory disturbances
US7181285B2 (en)2000-12-262007-02-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Expert system and method
US7179229B1 (en)2004-04-072007-02-20Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for apnea detection using blood pressure detected via an implantable medical system
US7184825B2 (en)1999-07-272007-02-27Cardinal Health 303, Inc.Needless medical connector having antimicrobial agent
US7184835B2 (en)2003-12-122007-02-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for adjustable AVD programming using a table
US20070049974A1 (en)2005-08-232007-03-01Dan LiAutomatic multi-level therapy based on morphologic organization of an arrhythmia
US20070055124A1 (en)2005-09-012007-03-08Viswanathan Raju RMethod and system for optimizing left-heart lead placement
US7194309B2 (en)2000-09-182007-03-20Cameron Health, Inc.Packaging technology for non-transvenous cardioverter/defibrillator devices
US7194302B2 (en)2000-09-182007-03-20Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous cardiac stimulator with small contact surface electrodes
US7194313B2 (en)2003-12-242007-03-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Baroreflex therapy for disordered breathing
US7203540B2 (en)2003-12-222007-04-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for setting cardiac resynchronization therapy parameters
US7203542B2 (en)2002-12-162007-04-10St. Jude Medical AbImplantable biventricular cardiac stimulator with capture monitoring by IECG analysis
US7203543B2 (en)2002-10-232007-04-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for detecting capture using a coronary vein electrode
US7225021B1 (en)2004-01-302007-05-29Pacesetter, Inc.Differentiation of central sleep apnea and obstructive sleep apnea using an implantable cardiac device
US7228173B2 (en)2004-11-232007-06-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac tachyarrhythmia therapy selection based on patient response information
US7233821B2 (en)2005-03-312007-06-19Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for evaluating ventricular performance during isovolumic contraction
US20070142741A1 (en)2003-11-262007-06-21Michael Berthon-JonesMacro-control of treatment for sleep disordered breathing
US20070142737A1 (en)2005-12-202007-06-21Shelley CazaresArrhythmia discrimination based on determination of rate dependency
US7236819B2 (en)2003-04-112007-06-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Separation of a subcutaneous cardiac signal from a plurality of composite signals
US7242978B2 (en)2003-12-032007-07-10Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for generating a template for arrhythmia detection and electrogram morphology classification
US7245962B2 (en)2001-07-302007-07-17The Trustees Of Columbia University In The City Of New YorkSystem and method for determining reentrant ventricular tachycardia isthmus location and shape for catheter ablation
US7248921B2 (en)2003-06-022007-07-24Cameron Health, Inc.Method and devices for performing cardiac waveform appraisal
WO2007087025A1 (en)2006-01-252007-08-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac resynchronization therapy parameter optimization
US7263399B2 (en)2002-04-292007-08-28Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus and methods for analysis of cardiac device stored episodes containing sensed signals and waveforms
US7277754B2 (en)2003-12-242007-10-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for removing pacing artifacts from subcutaneous electrocardiograms
US20070239057A1 (en)2006-03-292007-10-11Yanchuan PuPeriodic disordered breathing detection
US20070255321A1 (en)2006-04-282007-11-01Medtronic, Inc.Efficacy visualization
US7299086B2 (en)2004-03-052007-11-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Wireless ECG in implantable devices
US7308311B2 (en)2002-11-222007-12-11Pacesetter, Inc.Physician programmer system with telemetered sensor waveform
US20080004665A1 (en)2006-06-292008-01-03Mccabe Aaron RDetermination of cardiac pacing parameters based on non-localized sensing
US20080009909A1 (en)2006-06-292008-01-10Sathaye Alok SLocal and non-local sensing for cardiac pacing
US7330761B2 (en)2004-12-152008-02-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Baseline adaptation for cardiac pacing response classification
US20080045851A1 (en)2006-08-182008-02-21Shelley Marie CazaresMethods and devices for determination of arrhythmia rate zone thresholds
US7337000B2 (en)2005-04-282008-02-26Cardiac Pacemakers Inc.Selection of cardiac signal features detected in multiple classification intervals for cardiac pacing response classification
US20080071318A1 (en)2006-09-142008-03-20Brooke M JasonTherapeutic electrical stimulation that avoids undesirable activation
US7359749B2 (en)2002-11-142008-04-15Ela Medical S.A.S.Device for analysis of a signal, in particular a physiological signal such as an ECG signal
US7369889B2 (en)2003-04-242008-05-06St. Jude Medical AbApparatus for analyzing cardiac events
US7392086B2 (en)2005-04-262008-06-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable cardiac device and method for reduced phrenic nerve stimulation
US7426412B1 (en)2004-10-132008-09-16Pacesetter, Inc.Evoked potential and impedance based determination of diaphragmatic stimulation
US7438686B2 (en)2003-01-102008-10-21Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus and method for monitoring for disordered breathing
US7457664B2 (en)2005-05-092008-11-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Closed loop cardiac resynchronization therapy using cardiac activation sequence information
US7468040B2 (en)2003-09-182008-12-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for implantably monitoring external breathing therapy
US20090030470A1 (en)2006-01-262009-01-29Nils HolmstromImplantable heart stimulation device with remedial response to anodal capture
WO2009020639A1 (en)2007-08-072009-02-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus to perform electrode combination selection
US20090043351A1 (en)2007-08-072009-02-12Sathaye Alok SMethod and apparatus to perform electrode combination selection
US7499751B2 (en)2005-04-282009-03-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac signal template generation using waveform clustering
US7509170B2 (en)2005-05-092009-03-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic capture verification using electrocardiograms sensed from multiple implanted electrodes
US7587240B2 (en)2004-12-152009-09-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Atrial capture verification
US7617002B2 (en)2003-09-152009-11-10Medtronic, Inc.Selection of neurostimulator parameter configurations using decision trees
US7647108B2 (en)2004-09-302010-01-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for selection of cardiac pacing electrode configurations
US7680536B2 (en)2006-08-172010-03-16Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Capture threshold estimation for alternate pacing vectors
US7734347B2 (en)2004-12-152010-06-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing response classification based on waveform feature variability
US7738959B2 (en)2002-09-302010-06-15Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for performing stimulation threshold searches

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US647742A (en)*1899-01-071900-04-17Clarence S BrewsterValve for pneumatic tires.

Patent Citations (490)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3782367A (en)*1972-02-251974-01-01Hoffmann La Roche{37 pacemaker{38 {11 monitoring technique and system
US3920005A (en)1972-03-161975-11-18Medtronic IncEvaluation system for cardiac stimulators
US4023564A (en)1976-01-261977-05-17Spacelabs, Inc.Arrhythmia detector
US4340063A (en)1980-01-021982-07-20Empi, Inc.Stimulation device
US4365636A (en)1981-06-191982-12-28Medicon, Inc.Method of monitoring patient respiration and predicting apnea therefrom
US4458692A (en)1982-02-111984-07-10Arrhythmia Research Technology, Inc.System and method for predicting ventricular tachycardia with a gain controlled high pass filter
US4562841A (en)1982-08-051986-01-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Programmable multi-mode cardiac pacemaker
US4550221A (en)1983-10-071985-10-29Scott MabusthTouch sensitive control device
US4860766A (en)1983-11-181989-08-29Respitrace Corp.Noninvasive method for measuring and monitoring intrapleural pressure in newborns
US4552154A (en)1984-03-121985-11-12Medtronic, Inc.Waveform morphology discriminator and method
US4680708A (en)1984-03-201987-07-14Washington UniversityMethod and apparatus for analyzing electrocardiographic signals
US4573481A (en)1984-06-251986-03-04Huntington Institute Of Applied ResearchImplantable electrode array
US4648407A (en)1985-07-081987-03-10Respitrace CorporationMethod for detecting and differentiating central and obstructive apneas in newborns
US4827935A (en)1986-04-241989-05-09Purdue Research FoundationDemand electroventilator
US4686332A (en)1986-06-261987-08-11International Business Machines CorporationCombined finger touch and stylus detection system for use on the viewing surface of a visual display device
US4953551A (en)1987-01-141990-09-04Medtronic, Inc.Method of defibrillating a heart
US6375621B1 (en)1987-03-062002-04-23Ocean Laboratories, Inc.Passive apnea monitor
US4878497A (en)1988-03-251989-11-07Telectronics N.V.Pacemaker with improved automatic output regulation
US4979507A (en)1988-05-101990-12-25Eckhard AltEnergy saving cardiac pacemaker
US4928688A (en)1989-01-231990-05-29Mieczyslaw MirowskiMethod and apparatus for treating hemodynamic disfunction
US5105354A (en)1989-01-231992-04-14Nippon Kayaku Kabushiki KaishaMethod and apparatus for correlating respiration and heartbeat variability
US5178156A (en)1989-06-201993-01-12Chest CorporationApnea preventive stimulating device
US5101831A (en)1989-07-071992-04-07Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd.System for discriminating sleep state
US5033467A (en)1989-08-161991-07-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Combined defibrillator pacer system utilizing pacer tip lead switch
US5000189A (en)1989-11-151991-03-19Regents Of The University Of MichiganMethod and system for monitoring electrocardiographic signals and detecting a pathological cardiac arrhythmia such as ventricular tachycardia
US5314459A (en)1990-01-231994-05-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillation electrode system having smooth current distribution with floating electrode
US5036849A (en)1990-04-041991-08-06Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Variable rate cardiac pacer
US5284136A (en)1990-04-041994-02-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Dual indifferent electrode pacemaker
US5187657A (en)1990-04-051993-02-16Hewlett-Packard CompanyCardiac analyzer with rem sleep detection
US6280462B1 (en)1990-04-252001-08-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable intravenous cardiac stimulation system with pulse generator housing serving as optional additional electrode
US5133353A (en)1990-04-251992-07-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable intravenous cardiac stimulation system with pulse generator housing serving as optional additional electrode
US5603732A (en)1990-06-061997-02-18Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous defibrillation electrodes
US5203348A (en)1990-06-061993-04-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous defibrillation electrodes
US5360442A (en)1990-06-061994-11-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous defibrillation electrodes
US5545202A (en)1990-06-061996-08-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Body implantable defibrillation system
US5230337A (en)1990-06-061993-07-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Process for implanting subcutaneous defibrillation electrodes
EP0468720A2 (en)1990-07-241992-01-29Telectronics N.V.Implantable automatic and haemodynamically responsive cardioverting/defibrillating pacemaker with means for minimizing bradycardia support pacing voltages
US5411529A (en)1990-08-101995-05-02Medtronic, Inc.Waveform discriminator for cardiac stimulation devices
US5271411A (en)1990-09-211993-12-21Colin Electronics Co., Ltd.Method and apparatus for ECG signal analysis and cardiac arrhythmia detection
US5222493A (en)1990-10-011993-06-29Siemens Pacesetter, Inc.Verification of capture using an indifferent electrode mounted on the pacemaker connector top
US5170784A (en)1990-11-271992-12-15Ceon RamonLeadless magnetic cardiac pacemaker
US5179945A (en)1991-01-171993-01-19Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillation/cardioversion system with multiple evaluation of heart condition prior to shock delivery
US5184615A (en)1991-03-081993-02-09Telectronics Pacing Systems, Inc.Apparatus and method for detecting abnormal cardiac rhythms using evoked potential measurements in an arrhythmia control system
US5827326A (en)1991-03-151998-10-27Angeion CorporationImplantable cardioverter defibrillator having a smaller energy storage capacity
US5146918A (en)1991-03-191992-09-15Medtronic, Inc.Demand apnea control of central and obstructive sleep apnea
US5331966A (en)1991-04-051994-07-26Medtronic, Inc.Subcutaneous multi-electrode sensing system, method and pacer
WO1992017240A1 (en)1991-04-051992-10-15Medtronic, Inc.Subcutaneous multi-electrode sensing system
US5335657A (en)1991-05-031994-08-09Cyberonics, Inc.Therapeutic treatment of sleep disorder by nerve stimulation
WO1992020402A1 (en)1991-05-171992-11-26Noel Desmond GrayA pacemaker for a heart
US5209229A (en)1991-05-201993-05-11Telectronics Pacing Systems, Inc.Apparatus and method employing plural electrode configurations for cardioversion of atrial fibrillation in an arrhythmia control system
US5300106A (en)1991-06-071994-04-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Insertion and tunneling tool for a subcutaneous wire patch electrode
US5217021A (en)1991-07-301993-06-08Telectronics Pacing Systems, Inc.Detection of cardiac arrhythmias using correlation of a cardiac electrical signals and temporal data compression
US5411533A (en)1991-08-091995-05-02Ela Medical S.A.Method and device for checking stimulation power in a pacemaker
US5233983A (en)1991-09-031993-08-10Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for apnea patient screening
US5388578A (en)1992-01-141995-02-14Incontrol, Inc.Electrode system for use with an implantable cardiac patient monitor
US5313953A (en)1992-01-141994-05-24Incontrol, Inc.Implantable cardiac patient monitor
US5634938A (en)1992-01-301997-06-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillator waveform generator for generating waveform of long duration
US5411525A (en)1992-01-301995-05-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Dual capacitor biphasic defibrillator waveform generator employing selective connection of capacitors for each phase
US5273035A (en)1992-02-031993-12-28Medtronic, Inc.Dual chamber pacemaker with safe airial pacing
US5374280A (en)1992-02-031994-12-20Medtronic, Inc.Dual chamber pacemaker system and method for delivering atrial sync pulses
US5301677A (en)1992-02-061994-04-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Arrhythmia detector using delta modulated turning point morphology of the ECG wave
US5261400A (en)1992-02-121993-11-16Medtronic, Inc.Defibrillator employing transvenous and subcutaneous electrodes and method of use
EP0560569A2 (en)1992-03-091993-09-15Angemed, Inc.Fibrillation and tachycardia detection
US5439482A (en)1992-04-071995-08-08Angeion CorporationProphylactic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US6299581B1 (en)1992-05-072001-10-09New York UniversityMethod and apparatus for optimizing the continuous positive airway pressure for treating obstructive sleep apnea
US5324310A (en)1992-07-011994-06-28Medtronic, Inc.Cardiac pacemaker with auto-capture function
US5292338A (en)1992-07-301994-03-08Medtronic, Inc.Atrial defibrillator employing transvenous and subcutaneous electrodes and method of use
US5353788A (en)1992-09-211994-10-11Miles Laughton ECardio-respiratory control and monitoring system for determining CPAP pressure for apnea treatment
US5391200A (en)1992-09-301995-02-21Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Defibrillation patch electrode having conductor-free resilient zone for minimally invasive deployment
US5531779A (en)1992-10-011996-07-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Stent-type defibrillation electrode structures
US5334222A (en)1992-11-031994-08-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac stimulating apparatus and method for heart failure therapy
US5350410A (en)1992-11-231994-09-27Siemens Pacesetter, Inc.Autocapture system for implantable pulse generator
US5916243A (en)1992-11-241999-06-29Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable conformal coil patch electrode with multiple conductive elements for cardioversion and defibrillation
US5715812A (en)1992-12-091998-02-10Nellcor Puritan BennettCompliance meter for respiratory therapy
US5517983A (en)1992-12-091996-05-21Puritan Bennett CorporationCompliance meter for respiratory therapy
US5697953A (en)1993-03-131997-12-16Angeion CorporationImplantable cardioverter defibrillator having a smaller displacement volume
US5318597A (en)1993-03-151994-06-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Rate adaptive cardiac rhythm management device control algorithm using trans-thoracic ventilation
US5366496A (en)1993-04-011994-11-22Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous shunted coil electrode
US5333095A (en)1993-05-031994-07-26Maxwell Laboratories, Inc., Sierra Capacitor Filter DivisionFeedthrough filter capacitor assembly for human implant
US5397342A (en)1993-06-071995-03-14Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Resilient structurally coupled and electrically independent electrodes
US5314430A (en)1993-06-241994-05-24Medtronic, Inc.Atrial defibrillator employing transvenous and subcutaneous electrodes and method of use
US5441518A (en)1993-07-221995-08-15Angeion CorporationImplantable cardioverter defibrillator system having independently controllable electrode discharge pathway
US5468254A (en)1993-07-261995-11-21Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for defibrillation using a multiphasic truncated exponential waveform
US5376476A (en)1993-08-021994-12-27Eylon; DanBattery orientation-indifferent battery receptor
US5411539A (en)1993-08-311995-05-02Medtronic, Inc.Active can emulator and method of use
US5443485A (en)1993-09-081995-08-22Intermedics, Inc.Apparatus and method for capture detection in a cardiac stimulator
US5372606A (en)1993-10-071994-12-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for generating adaptive n-phasic defibrillation waveforms
US5331996A (en)1993-10-081994-07-26Ziehm Raymond GDual mode hot water circulation apparatus
US5376106A (en)1993-10-181994-12-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Multi-sensor blending in a rate responsive cardiac pacemaker
US5411031A (en)1993-11-241995-05-02Incontrol, Inc.Implantable cardiac patient monitor
US5431693A (en)1993-12-101995-07-11Intermedics, Inc.Method of verifying capture of the heart by a pacemaker
US5641326A (en)1993-12-131997-06-24Angeion CorporationMethod and apparatus for independent atrial and ventricular defibrillation
US5522860A (en)1993-12-311996-06-04Ela Medical S.A.Control of an active implantable medical device
US5447519A (en)1994-03-191995-09-05Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for discrimination of monomorphic and polymorphic arrhythmias and for treatment thereof
US5738102A (en)1994-03-311998-04-14Lemelson; Jerome H.Patient monitoring system
US5844506A (en)1994-04-051998-12-01Binstead; Ronald PeterMultiple input proximity detector and touchpad system
US6888538B2 (en)1994-05-142005-05-03Synaptics (Uk) LimitedPosition sensor
US5957956A (en)1994-06-211999-09-28Angeion CorpImplantable cardioverter defibrillator having a smaller mass
US5658318A (en)1994-06-241997-08-19Pacesetter AbMethod and apparatus for detecting a state of imminent cardiac arrhythmia in response to a nerve signal from the autonomic nerve system to the heart, and for administrating anti-arrhythmia therapy in response thereto
US5549655A (en)1994-09-211996-08-27Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for synchronized treatment of obstructive sleep apnea
US5485851A (en)1994-09-211996-01-23Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for arousal detection
US5540732A (en)1994-09-211996-07-30Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for impedance detecting and treating obstructive airway disorders
US5520191A (en)1994-10-071996-05-28Ortivus Medical AbMyocardial ischemia and infarction analysis and monitoring method and apparatus
US5704365A (en)1994-11-141998-01-06Cambridge Heart, Inc.Using related signals to reduce ECG noise
US5540727A (en)1994-11-151996-07-30Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus to automatically optimize the pacing mode and pacing cycle parameters of a dual chamber pacemaker
US5713933A (en)1994-11-301998-02-03Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for automatic pacing threshold determination
US5534017A (en)1994-12-021996-07-09Vitatron Medical, B.V.Dual chamber pacemaker system with improved response to retrograde conduction
US5724984A (en)1995-01-261998-03-10Cambridge Heart, Inc.Multi-segment ECG electrode and system
US5626620A (en)1995-02-211997-05-06Medtronic, Inc.Dual chamber pacing system and method with continual adjustment of the AV escape interval so as to maintain optimized ventricular pacing for treating cardiomyopathy
US5855593A (en)1995-03-301999-01-05Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment for arrhythmias
US5545186A (en)1995-03-301996-08-13Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias
US6141581A (en)1995-03-302000-10-31Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias
US6487443B2 (en)1995-03-302002-11-26Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias
US6259947B1 (en)1995-03-302001-07-10Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias
US6363270B1 (en)1995-04-112002-03-26Resmed LimitedMonitoring the occurrence of apneic and hypopneic arousals
US6091973A (en)1995-04-112000-07-18Resmed LimitedMonitoring the occurrence of apneic and hypopneic arousals
US5591216A (en)1995-05-191997-01-07Medtronic, Inc.Method for treatment of sleep apnea by electrical stimulation
US5674254A (en)1995-05-221997-10-07Vitatron Medical, B.V.Cardiac pacemaker system and method for determining a measure of pacing threshold without incurring loss of capture
US5697956A (en)1995-06-021997-12-16Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable stimulation device having means for optimizing current drain
US5662688A (en)1995-08-141997-09-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Slow gain control
US5620466A (en)1995-08-141997-04-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Digital AGC using separate gain control and threshold templating
US6120441A (en)1995-10-162000-09-19Map Medizintechnik Fur Arzt Und Patient GmbhMethod and device for quantitative analysis of sleep disturbances
US5650759A (en)1995-11-091997-07-22Hittman Materials & Medical Components, Inc.Filtered feedthrough assembly having a mounted chip capacitor for medical implantable devices and method of manufacture therefor
US5836987A (en)1995-11-151998-11-17Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for optimizing cardiac performance by determining the optimal timing interval from an accelerometer signal
US5817027A (en)1995-11-291998-10-06Hewlett-Packard CompanyMethod and apparatus for classifying heartbeats in an ECG waveform
US5683431A (en)1996-03-271997-11-04Medtronic, Inc.Verification of capture by sensing evoked response across cardioversion electrodes
US5895414A (en)1996-04-191999-04-20Sanchez-Zambrano; SergioPacemaker housing
US6052620A (en)1996-05-142000-04-18Medtronic, Inc.Prioritized rule based method and apparatus for diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias
US5944680A (en)1996-06-261999-08-31Medtronic, Inc.Respiratory effort detection method and apparatus
US6132384A (en)1996-06-262000-10-17Medtronic, Inc.Sensor, method of sensor implant and system for treatment of respiratory disorders
US6496715B1 (en)1996-07-112002-12-17Medtronic, Inc.System and method for non-invasive determination of optimal orientation of an implantable sensing device
US5987352A (en)1996-07-111999-11-16Medtronic, Inc.Minimally invasive implantable device for monitoring physiologic events
US5857977A (en)1996-08-081999-01-12The Regents Of The University Of MichiganMethod and apparatus for separation of ventricular tachycardia from ventricular fibrillation for implantable cardioverter defibrillators
US6895274B2 (en)1996-08-192005-05-17The Mower Family Chf Treatment Irrevocable TrustAntitachycardial pacing
US5860918A (en)1996-11-221999-01-19Hewlett-Packard CompanyRepresentation of a review of a patent's physiological parameters
US6064910A (en)1996-11-252000-05-16Pacesetter AbRespirator rate/respiration depth detector and device for monitoring respiratory activity employing same
US5683434A (en)1996-12-061997-11-04Pacesetter, Inc.Microstrip EMI shunt for an implantable medical device
US5718720A (en)1996-12-131998-02-17Sulzer Intermedics Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulator with capture detection and impedance based autotuning of capture detection
US5735883A (en)1996-12-131998-04-07Sulzer Intermedics Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulator with impedance based autothreshold
US5779645A (en)1996-12-171998-07-14Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for waveform morphology comparison
US5814087A (en)1996-12-181998-09-29Medtronic, Inc.Rate responsive pacemaker adapted to adjust lower rate limit according to monitored patient blood temperature
US5876353A (en)1997-01-311999-03-02Medtronic, Inc.Impedance monitor for discerning edema through evaluation of respiratory rate
US6238419B1 (en)1997-02-052001-05-29Pacesetter AbHeart stimulating device having fusion and pseudofusion heartbeat detection capability
US5861011A (en)1997-02-141999-01-19Vitatron Medical, B.V.Pacemaker with automatic lower rate limit drop
US5871512A (en)1997-04-291999-02-16Medtronic, Inc.Microprocessor capture detection circuit and method
US5873898A (en)1997-04-291999-02-23Medtronic, Inc.Microprocessor capture detection circuit and method
US5861013A (en)1997-04-291999-01-19Medtronic Inc.Peak tracking capture detection circuit and method
US5974340A (en)1997-04-291999-10-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for monitoring respiratory function in heart failure patients to determine efficacy of therapy
US6134473A (en)1997-04-292000-10-17Medtronic, Inc.Microprocessor capture detection circuit and method
US6147680A (en)1997-06-032000-11-14Koa T&T CorporationTouchpad with interleaved traces
WO1999004841A1 (en)1997-07-251999-02-04Minnesota Innovative Technologies & Instruments Corporation (Miti)Control device for supplying supplemental respiratory oxygen
US6076014A (en)1997-08-012000-06-13Sulzer Intermedics, Inc.Cardiac stimulator and defibrillator with means for identifying cardiac rhythm disorder and chamber of origin
US6128535A (en)1997-12-052000-10-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic capture verification in multisite cardiac pacing
US6607509B2 (en)1997-12-312003-08-19Medtronic Minimed, Inc.Insertion device for an insertion set and method of using the same
US6368287B1 (en)1998-01-082002-04-09S.L.P. Ltd.Integrated sleep apnea screening system
US6258039B1 (en)1998-01-192001-07-10Nippon Sanso CorporationRespiratory gas consumption monitoring device and monitoring method
US6148230A (en)1998-01-302000-11-14Uab Research FoundationMethod for the monitoring and treatment of spontaneous cardiac arrhythmias
EP0940155A2 (en)1998-02-041999-09-08Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus for management of sleep apnea
US6126611A (en)1998-02-042000-10-03Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus for management of sleep apnea
US6076015A (en)1998-02-272000-06-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Rate adaptive cardiac rhythm management device using transthoracic impedance
US5964778A (en)1998-03-171999-10-12Medtronic, Inc.Balloon attachment at catheter tip
US6253102B1 (en)1998-03-252001-06-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System for displaying cardiac arrhythmia data
US6251126B1 (en)1998-04-232001-06-26Medtronic IncMethod and apparatus for synchronized treatment of obstructive sleep apnea
US6542775B2 (en)1998-05-082003-04-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing using adjustable atrio-ventricular delays
US6351673B1 (en)1998-05-082002-02-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing using adjustable atrio-ventricular delays
US6360127B1 (en)1998-05-082002-03-19Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing using adjustable atrio-ventricular delays
US6045513A (en)1998-05-132000-04-04Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device for tracking patient functional status
US6026320A (en)1998-06-082000-02-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Heart rate variability as an indicator of exercise capacity
US6128534A (en)1998-06-162000-10-03Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device and method for varying pacing parameters to mimic circadian cycles
WO2000001438A1 (en)1998-07-062000-01-13Ela Medical S.A.An active implantable medical device for treating sleep apnea syndrome by electrostimulation
US6574507B1 (en)1998-07-062003-06-03Ela Medical S.A.Active implantable medical device for treating sleep apnea syndrome by electrostimulation
US6055454A (en)1998-07-272000-04-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacemaker with automatic response optimization of a physiologic sensor based on a second sensor
US6434428B1 (en)1998-07-292002-08-13Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for optimizing far-field R-wave sensing by switching electrode polarity during atrial capture verification
US6101416A (en)1998-07-292000-08-08Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for atrial autocapture in single-chamber pacemaker modes using far-field detection
US6345201B1 (en)1998-07-292002-02-05Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for ventricular capture using far-field evoked response
US6738669B1 (en)1998-07-292004-05-18Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for multichamber cardiac stimulation with ventricular capture verification using far-field evoked response
US6295330B1 (en)1998-08-052001-09-25Siemens-Elema AbDevice for repeated registration of the number of thermal cycles to which a part for medical usage has been subjected
US6424234B1 (en)1998-09-182002-07-23Greatbatch-Sierra, Inc.Electromagnetic interference (emi) filter and process for providing electromagnetic compatibility of an electronic device while in the presence of an electromagnetic emitter operating at the same frequency
US6163724A (en)1998-09-182000-12-19Medtronic, Inc.Microprocessor capture detection circuit and method
WO2000017615A2 (en)1998-09-232000-03-30Keith BridgerPhysiological sensing device
US6148234A (en)1998-09-282000-11-14Medtronic Inc.Dual site pacing system with automatic pulse output adjustment
US6227072B1 (en)1998-10-022001-05-08Ritchey Designs, Inc.Light weight bicycle pedal
US6044298A (en)1998-10-132000-03-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Optimization of pacing parameters based on measurement of integrated acoustic noise
US6415174B1 (en)1998-11-092002-07-02Board Of Regents The University Of Texas SystemECG derived respiratory rhythms for improved diagnosis of sleep apnea
US6169921B1 (en)1998-12-082001-01-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Autocapture determination for an implantable cardioverter defibrillator
US6049730A (en)1998-12-282000-04-11Flaga HfMethod and apparatus for improving the accuracy of interpretation of ECG-signals
US6466820B1 (en)1998-12-292002-10-15Medtronic, Inc.Multi-site cardiac pacing system having trigger pace window
US6324427B1 (en)*1999-01-262001-11-27Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device having T-wave discrimination of fusion events during autocapture/autothreshold assessment
US6438410B2 (en)1999-02-122002-08-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System and method for a classifying cardiac complexes
US6266554B1 (en)1999-02-122001-07-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System and method for classifying cardiac complexes
US6084253A (en)1999-03-012000-07-04Teccor Electronics, LpLow voltage four-layer device with offset buried region
US6038474A (en)*1999-03-022000-03-14Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Pseudo-fusion management during automatic capture verification
US6275731B1 (en)1999-03-022001-08-14Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Pseudo-fusion management during automatic capture verification
US6312388B1 (en)1999-03-122001-11-06Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for verifying the integrity of normal sinus rhythm templates
US6438409B1 (en)1999-03-252002-08-20Medtronic, Inc.Methods of characterizing ventricular operations and applications thereof
EP1038498A2 (en)1999-03-252000-09-27St. George's Enterprises LimitedMethods of characterising ventricular operation and applications thereof
US6115628A (en)1999-03-292000-09-05Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for filtering electrocardiogram (ECG) signals to remove bad cycle information and for use of physiologic signals determined from said filtered ECG signals
US6324421B1 (en)1999-03-292001-11-27Medtronic, Inc.Axis shift analysis of electrocardiogram signal parameters especially applicable for multivector analysis by implantable medical devices, and use of same
US6175766B1 (en)1999-03-302001-01-16Pacesetter, Inc.Cardiac pacemaker autothreshold arrangement and method with reliable capture
US6190326B1 (en)1999-04-232001-02-20Medtrac Technologies, Inc.Method and apparatus for obtaining patient respiratory data
US6192275B1 (en)1999-05-112001-02-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Adaptive evoked response sensing for automatic capture verification
US6226551B1 (en)1999-05-112001-05-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Wide-band evoked response sensing for capture verification
US6393316B1 (en)1999-05-122002-05-21Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for detection and treatment of cardiac arrhythmias
US6351669B1 (en)1999-05-212002-02-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management system promoting atrial pacing
US6285907B1 (en)1999-05-212001-09-04Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System providing ventricular pacing and biventricular coordination
US6353759B1 (en)1999-05-212002-03-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management system promoting a trial pacing
US6411848B2 (en)1999-05-212002-06-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System providing ventricular pacing and biventricular coordination
US6270457B1 (en)1999-06-032001-08-07Cardiac Intelligence Corp.System and method for automated collection and analysis of regularly retrieved patient information for remote patient care
US6358203B2 (en)1999-06-032002-03-19Cardiac Intelligence Corp.System and method for automated collection and analysis of patient information retrieved from an implantable medical device for remote patient care
US6312378B1 (en)1999-06-032001-11-06Cardiac Intelligence CorporationSystem and method for automated collection and analysis of patient information retrieved from an implantable medical device for remote patient care
US6449503B1 (en)1999-07-142002-09-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Classification of supraventricular and ventricular cardiac rhythms using cross channel timing algorithm
US6277072B1 (en)1999-07-262001-08-21Cardiac Intelligence Corp.System and method for monitoring a patient status for an individual patient using a reference baseline in an automated collection and analysis patient care system
US6280380B1 (en)1999-07-262001-08-28Cardiac Intelligence CorporationSystem and method for determining a reference baseline of individual patient status for use in an automated collection and analysis patient care system
US6221011B1 (en)1999-07-262001-04-24Cardiac Intelligence CorporationSystem and method for determining a reference baseline of individual patient status for use in an automated collection and analysis patient care system
US7184825B2 (en)1999-07-272007-02-27Cardinal Health 303, Inc.Needless medical connector having antimicrobial agent
US6418340B1 (en)1999-08-202002-07-09Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for identifying and displaying groups of cardiac arrhythmic episodes
US6272377B1 (en)1999-10-012001-08-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management system with arrhythmia prediction and prevention
US6418343B1 (en)1999-10-012002-07-09Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for adjusting the sensing threshold of a cardiac rhythm management device
US7127290B2 (en)1999-10-012006-10-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management systems and methods predicting congestive heart failure status
US6459929B1 (en)1999-11-042002-10-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable cardiac rhythm management device for assessing status of CHF patients
US6491639B1 (en)1999-11-102002-12-10Pacesetter, Inc.Extravascular hemodynamic sensor
US6409675B1 (en)1999-11-102002-06-25Pacesetter, Inc.Extravascular hemodynamic monitor
US6480733B1 (en)1999-11-102002-11-12Pacesetter, Inc.Method for monitoring heart failure
US6600949B1 (en)1999-11-102003-07-29Pacesetter, Inc.Method for monitoring heart failure via respiratory patterns
US6440066B1 (en)1999-11-162002-08-27Cardiac Intelligence CorporationAutomated collection and analysis patient care system and method for ordering and prioritizing multiple health disorders to identify an index disorder
US6368284B1 (en)1999-11-162002-04-09Cardiac Intelligence CorporationAutomated collection and analysis patient care system and method for diagnosing and monitoring myocardial ischemia and outcomes thereof
US6336903B1 (en)1999-11-162002-01-08Cardiac Intelligence Corp.Automated collection and analysis patient care system and method for diagnosing and monitoring congestive heart failure and outcomes thereof
US6398728B1 (en)1999-11-162002-06-04Cardiac Intelligence CorporationAutomated collection and analysis patient care system and method for diagnosing and monitoring respiratory insufficiency and outcomes thereof
US6415183B1 (en)1999-12-092002-07-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for diaphragmatic pacing
US6505071B1 (en)1999-12-152003-01-07Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac management device with capability of noise detection in automatic capture verification
US6282440B1 (en)1999-12-312001-08-28Ge Marquette Medical Systems, Inc.Method to identify electrode placement
US6477422B1 (en)2000-03-222002-11-05Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for capture detection
US6434417B1 (en)2000-03-282002-08-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for detecting cardiac depolarization
US7144586B2 (en)2000-03-292006-12-05Lycored Natural Products Industries Ltd.Compositions for preventing hormone induced adverse effects
US6615089B1 (en)2000-03-312003-09-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.System and method for verifying capture in a multi-site pacemaker
US6371922B1 (en)2000-04-072002-04-16Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method for measuring baroreflex sensitivity and therapy optimization in heart failure patients
US20020002327A1 (en)2000-04-102002-01-03Grant Brydon J.B.Method for detecting cheyne-stokes respiration in patients with congestive heart failure
US6456880B1 (en)2000-05-012002-09-24Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device for and method of monitoring progression or regression of a patient's heart condition by monitoring ventricular repolarization interval dispersion
US6589188B1 (en)2000-05-052003-07-08Pacesetter, Inc.Method for monitoring heart failure via respiratory patterns
EP1151718A2 (en)2000-05-052001-11-07Pacesetter, Inc.Apparatus for monitoring heart failure via respiratory patterns
US20010049542A1 (en)2000-05-112001-12-06Florio Joseph J.System and method for automatically verifying capture during multi-chamber stimulation
US6512953B2 (en)2000-05-112003-01-28Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for automatically verifying capture during multi-chamber stimulation
US6618619B1 (en)2000-05-122003-09-09Pacesetter, Inc.Method and apparatus for reducing the effect of evoked responses on polarization measurements in an automatic capture pacing system
US6615082B1 (en)2000-05-152003-09-02Pacesetter, Inc.Method and device for optimally altering stimulation energy to maintain capture of cardiac tissue
US6363281B1 (en)2000-05-162002-03-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac rhythm management system and method
US6925324B2 (en)2000-05-302005-08-02Vladimir ShustermanSystem and device for multi-scale analysis and representation of physiological data
US20020052631A1 (en)2000-06-192002-05-02Sullivan Joseph L.Method and apparatus using a time measurement to an electrical parameter threshold to determine a defibrillation pulse duration
US6480734B1 (en)2000-06-302002-11-12Cardiac Science Inc.Cardiac arrhythmia detector using ECG waveform-factor and its irregularity
US6424865B1 (en)2000-07-132002-07-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Ventricular conduction delay trending system and method
US6456881B1 (en)2000-08-022002-09-24Pacesetter, Inc.System and method of identifying fusion for dual-chamber automatic capture stimulation device
US6690967B2 (en)2000-08-032004-02-10Draeger Medical System, Inc.Electrocardiogram system for synthesizing leads and providing an accuracy measure
US6961619B2 (en)2000-08-292005-11-01Casey Don ESubcutaneously implantable power supply
US6493586B1 (en)2000-08-302002-12-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Site reversion in cardiac rhythm management
US20020035381A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode with improved contact shape for transthoracic conduction
US6856835B2 (en)2000-09-182005-02-15Cameron Health, Inc.Biphasic waveform for anti-tachycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US7149575B2 (en)2000-09-182006-12-12Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous cardiac stimulator device having an anteriorly positioned electrode
US20020035377A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with insertion tool
US7146212B2 (en)2000-09-182006-12-05Cameron Health, Inc.Anti-bradycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US6788974B2 (en)2000-09-182004-09-07Cameron Health, Inc.Radian curve shaped implantable cardioverter-defibrillator canister
US20020095184A1 (en)2000-09-182002-07-18Bardy Gust H.Monophasic waveform for anti-tachycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US6988003B2 (en)2000-09-182006-01-17Cameron Health, Inc.Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator having two spaced apart shocking electrodes on housing
US20020107544A1 (en)2000-09-182002-08-08Cameron Health, Inc.Current waveform for anti-bradycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US7120495B2 (en)2000-09-182006-10-10Cameron Health, Inc.Flexible subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US6950705B2 (en)2000-09-182005-09-27Cameron Health, Inc.Canister designs for implantable cardioverter-defibrillators
US7092754B2 (en)2000-09-182006-08-15Cameron Health, Inc.Monophasic waveform for anti-bradycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US7090682B2 (en)2000-09-182006-08-15Cameron Health, Inc.Method and apparatus for extraction of a subcutaneous electrode
US7076296B2 (en)2000-09-182006-07-11Cameron Health, Inc.Method of supplying energy to subcutaneous cardioverter-defibrillator and pacer
US6952610B2 (en)2000-09-182005-10-04Cameron Health, Inc.Current waveforms for anti-tachycardia pacing for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter- defibrillator
US7194309B2 (en)2000-09-182007-03-20Cameron Health, Inc.Packaging technology for non-transvenous cardioverter/defibrillator devices
US20020035379A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Bardy Gust H.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with improved installation characteristics
US7069080B2 (en)2000-09-182006-06-27Cameron Health, Inc.Active housing and subcutaneous electrode cardioversion/defibrillating system
US20020035378A1 (en)2000-09-182002-03-21Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with highly maneuverable insertion tool
US20020107545A1 (en)2000-09-182002-08-08Cameron Health, Inc.Power supply for a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
US7065410B2 (en)2000-09-182006-06-20Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode with improved contact shape for transthorasic conduction
US6937907B2 (en)2000-09-182005-08-30Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous electrode for transthoracic conduction with low-profile installation appendage and method of doing same
US7039465B2 (en)2000-09-182006-05-02Cameron Health, Inc.Ceramics and/or other material insulated shell for active and non-active S-ICD can
US7065407B2 (en)2000-09-182006-06-20Cameron Health, Inc.Duckbill-shaped implantable cardioverter-defibrillator canister and method of use
US7039459B2 (en)2000-09-182006-05-02Cameron Health, Inc.Cardioverter-defibrillator having a focused shocking area and orientation thereof
US7043299B2 (en)2000-09-182006-05-09Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator employing a telescoping lead
US6866044B2 (en)2000-09-182005-03-15Cameron Health, Inc.Method of insertion and implantation of implantable cardioverter-defibrillator canisters
US7194302B2 (en)2000-09-182007-03-20Cameron Health, Inc.Subcutaneous cardiac stimulator with small contact surface electrodes
US6725085B2 (en)2000-09-222004-04-20Armin SchwartzmanMethod and apparatus for characterizing cardiac tissue from local electrograms
US6631290B1 (en)2000-10-252003-10-07Medtronic, Inc.Multilayer ceramic electrodes for sensing cardiac depolarization signals
US6522915B1 (en)2000-10-262003-02-18Medtronic, Inc.Surround shroud connector and electrode housings for a subcutaneous electrode array and leadless ECGS
US6512940B1 (en)2000-10-312003-01-28Medtronic, Inc.Subcutaneous spiral electrode for sensing electrical signals of the heart
US6684100B1 (en)2000-10-312004-01-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Curvature based method for selecting features from an electrophysiologic signals for purpose of complex identification and classification
US6983264B2 (en)2000-11-012006-01-03International Business Machines CorporationSignal separation method and apparatus for restoring original signal from observed data
US6944579B2 (en)2000-11-012005-09-13International Business Machines CorporationSignal separation method, signal processing apparatus, image processing apparatus, medical image processing apparatus and storage medium for restoring multidimensional signals from observed data in which multiple signals are mixed
US6944495B2 (en)2000-11-102005-09-13C.R. Bard, Inc.Methods for processing electrocardiac signals having superimposed complexes
WO2002040097A1 (en)2000-11-172002-05-23St. Jude Medical AbA cardiac stimulating device
US20030212436A1 (en)2000-11-222003-11-13Brown Ward M.Apparatus for detecting and treating ventricular arrhythmia
US6505067B1 (en)2000-11-222003-01-07Medtronic, Inc.System and method for deriving a virtual ECG or EGM signal
US20020082658A1 (en)2000-11-222002-06-27Heinrich Stephen D.Apparatus for detecting and treating ventricular arrhythmia
US6754523B2 (en)2000-11-282004-06-22J. Gerald TooleMethod of analysis of the electrocardiogram
US6564106B2 (en)2000-12-132003-05-13Medtronic, Inc.Thin film electrodes for sensing cardiac depolarization signals
US6904315B2 (en)2000-12-142005-06-07Medtronic, Inc.Atrial aware VVI: a method for atrial synchronous ventricular (VDD/R) pacing using the subcutaneous electrode array and a standard pacing lead
WO2002047761A2 (en)2000-12-142002-06-20Medtronic, Inc.Atrial aware vvi: a method for atrial synchronous ventricular (vdd/r) pacing using the subcutaneous electrode array and a standard pacing lead
US6567701B2 (en)2000-12-212003-05-20Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for discriminating captured beats from non-captured beats in a cardiac pacing system
US6611712B2 (en)2000-12-262003-08-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for testing and adjusting a bipolar stimulation configuration
US7181285B2 (en)2000-12-262007-02-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Expert system and method
US7191003B2 (en)2001-01-172007-03-13Biotronik Mess- Und Therapiegeraete Gmbh & Co. Ingenieurbuero BerlinStimulation arrangement with stimulation success monitoring
US20020138111A1 (en)2001-01-172002-09-26Biotronik Mess-Und Therapiegeraete Gmbh & Co.Stimulation arrangement with stimulation success monitoring
US6553259B2 (en)2001-03-142003-04-22Pacesetter, Inc.System and method of performing automatic capture in an implantable cardiac stimulation device
US6597951B2 (en)2001-03-162003-07-22Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic selection from multiple cardiac optimization protocols
US6993389B2 (en)2001-03-302006-01-31Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Identifying heart failure patients suitable for resynchronization therapy using QRS complex width from an intracardiac electrogram
US6658293B2 (en)2001-04-272003-12-02Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for atrial capture detection based on far-field R-wave sensing
US6615083B2 (en)2001-04-272003-09-02Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device system with sensor for hemodynamic stability and method of use
US6641542B2 (en)2001-04-302003-11-04Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus to detect and treat sleep respiratory events
WO2002087696A1 (en)2001-04-302002-11-07Medtronic,Inc.Transcutaneous monitor and method of use, using therapeutic output from an implanted medical device
US6654637B2 (en)2001-04-302003-11-25Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for ventricular fusion prevention
US6708058B2 (en)2001-04-302004-03-16Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Normal cardiac rhythm template generation system and method
US6622046B2 (en)2001-05-072003-09-16Medtronic, Inc.Subcutaneous sensing feedthrough/electrode assembly
US7081095B2 (en)2001-05-172006-07-25Lynn Lawrence ACentralized hospital monitoring system for automatically detecting upper airway instability and for preventing and aborting adverse drug reactions
US20030023175A1 (en)2001-05-222003-01-30Arzbaecher Robert C.Implantable cardiac arrest monitor and alarm system
US6456481B1 (en)2001-05-312002-09-24Greatbatch-Sierra, Inc.Integrated EMI filter-DC blocking capacitor
US6731984B2 (en)2001-06-072004-05-04Medtronic, Inc.Method for providing a therapy to a patient involving modifying the therapy after detecting an onset of sleep in the patient, and implantable medical device embodying same
US6731973B2 (en)2001-06-122004-05-04Ge Medical Systems Information Technologies, Inc.Method and apparatus for processing physiological data
US6917832B2 (en)2001-06-142005-07-12Biotronik Mess- Und Therapiegeraete Gmbh & Co. Ingenieurbuero BerlinStimulation apparatus
US7050851B2 (en)2001-06-292006-05-23Medtronic, Inc.Implantable cardioverter/defibrillator with housing electrode and lead detection and switching circuitry
US20050010120A1 (en)2001-07-052005-01-13Tzyy- Ping JungSystem and method for separating cardiac signals
WO2003003905A2 (en)2001-07-052003-01-16Softmax, Inc.System and method for separating cardiac signals
US6595927B2 (en)2001-07-232003-07-22Medtronic, Inc.Method and system for diagnosing and administering therapy of pulmonary congestion
US7245962B2 (en)2001-07-302007-07-17The Trustees Of Columbia University In The City Of New YorkSystem and method for determining reentrant ventricular tachycardia isthmus location and shape for catheter ablation
US7096064B2 (en)2001-08-282006-08-22Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device for treating cardiac mechanical dysfunction by electrical stimulation
EP1291038A2 (en)2001-09-102003-03-12Pacesetter, Inc.Pacemaker with enhanced capture tracking
US7006869B2 (en)2001-09-102006-02-28Pacesetter, Inc.Method and device for enhanced capture tracking by discrimination of fusion beats
US20030050671A1 (en)2001-09-102003-03-13Kerry BradleyMethod and device for enhanced capture tracking by discrimination of fusion beats
US6640136B1 (en)2001-09-122003-10-28Pacesetters, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device with automatic electrode selection for avoiding cross-chamber stimulation
US6830548B2 (en)2001-09-242004-12-14Ela Medical S.A.Active medical device able to diagnose a patient respiratory profile
US6772008B2 (en)2001-09-282004-08-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for avoidance of phrenic nerve stimulation during cardiac pacing
US7299093B2 (en)2001-09-282007-11-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for avoidance of phrenic nerve stimulation during cardiac pacing
WO2003028550A2 (en)2001-10-032003-04-10Qinetiq LimitedApparatus for monitoring fetal heart-beat
US7027861B2 (en)2001-10-092006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for affecting atrial defibrillation with bi-atrial pacing
US6731985B2 (en)2001-10-162004-05-04Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation system and method for automatic capture verification calibration
US20060241706A1 (en)2001-10-262006-10-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Morphology-based optimization of cardiac resynchronization therapy
US7177689B2 (en)2001-10-262007-02-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for capture verification and threshold determination
US7286876B2 (en)2001-10-262007-10-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Template-based capture verification for multi-site pacing
US20030083711A1 (en)2001-10-262003-05-01Yonce David J.Template-based capture verification for multi-site pacing
US20030083710A1 (en)2001-10-262003-05-01David TernesMethod and apparatus for capture verification and threshold determination
US7113823B2 (en)2001-10-262006-09-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Morphology-based optimization of cardiac resynchronization therapy
US6731983B2 (en)2001-10-302004-05-04Medtronic, Inc.Pacemaker having adaptive arrhythmia detection windows
US7027868B2 (en)2001-10-302006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.Capture management improvements
US6760615B2 (en)2001-10-312004-07-06Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for discriminating between tachyarrhythmias
US6766190B2 (en)2001-10-312004-07-20Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for developing a vectorcardiograph in an implantable medical device
US6738668B1 (en)2001-11-012004-05-18Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation device having a capture assurance system which minimizes battery current drain and method for operating the same
US6701170B2 (en)2001-11-022004-03-02Nellcor Puritan Bennett IncorporatedBlind source separation of pulse oximetry signals
US6954670B2 (en)2001-11-052005-10-11Cameron Health, Inc.Simplified defibrillator output circuit
US6865417B2 (en)2001-11-052005-03-08Cameron Health, Inc.H-bridge with sensing circuit
US6834204B2 (en)2001-11-052004-12-21Cameron Health, Inc.Method and apparatus for inducing defibrillation in a patient using a T-shock waveform
US6927721B2 (en)2001-11-052005-08-09Cameron Health, Inc.Low power A/D converter
US6778860B2 (en)2001-11-052004-08-17Cameron Health, Inc.Switched capacitor defibrillation circuit
US6952608B2 (en)2001-11-052005-10-04Cameron Health, Inc.Defibrillation pacing circuitry
US6975904B1 (en)2001-11-082005-12-13Pacesetter, Inc.Modification of evoked response detection algorithm based on orientation and activity of patient
US6754528B2 (en)2001-11-212004-06-22Cameraon Health, Inc.Apparatus and method of arrhythmia detection in a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter/defibrillator
US6959214B2 (en)2001-11-282005-10-25Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device for measuring mechanical heart function
US6768923B2 (en)2001-12-052004-07-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for ventricular pacing triggered by detection of early ventricular excitation
US6773404B2 (en)2001-12-072004-08-10Ela Medical S.A.Discriminating between an awake phase and a sleep phase of a patient in an active implantable medical device
US6890306B2 (en)2001-12-142005-05-10Ela Medical S.A.Active medical device for the diagnosis of the sleep apnea syndrome
US6768924B2 (en)2002-01-032004-07-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for capture verification based on propagated electrical activity
US20030135248A1 (en)2002-01-112003-07-17Medtronic, Inc.Variation of neural-stimulation parameters
US6915160B2 (en)2002-02-082005-07-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Dynamically optimized multisite cardiac resynchronization device
US20030199945A1 (en)2002-02-112003-10-23James CiullaDevice and method for treating disordered breathing
US6928324B2 (en)2002-02-142005-08-09Pacesetter, Inc.Stimulation device for sleep apnea prevention, detection and treatment
US6904320B2 (en)2002-02-142005-06-07Pacesetter, Inc.Sleep apnea therapy device using dynamic overdrive pacing
US7212862B2 (en)2002-02-142007-05-01Pacesetter, Inc.Cardiac stimulation device including sleep apnea prevention and treatment
US6999817B2 (en)2002-02-142006-02-14Packsetter, Inc.Cardiac stimulation device including sleep apnea prevention and treatment
US6885893B1 (en)2002-03-252005-04-26Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable stimulation device and method for performing inter-chamber conduction search and conduction time measurement
US20030195571A1 (en)2002-04-122003-10-16Burnes John E.Method and apparatus for the treatment of central sleep apnea using biventricular pacing
US6889079B2 (en)2002-04-122005-05-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for characterizing supraventricular rhythm during cardiac pacing
US6915164B2 (en)2002-04-162005-07-05Pacesetter, Inc.Automatic capture using independent channels in bi-chamber stimulation
US7139610B2 (en)2002-04-262006-11-21Medtronic, Inc.Capture management in multi-site pacing
US7263399B2 (en)2002-04-292007-08-28Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus and methods for analysis of cardiac device stored episodes containing sensed signals and waveforms
US20030204213A1 (en)2002-04-302003-10-30Jensen Donald N.Method and apparatus to detect and monitor the frequency of obstructive sleep apnea
US6978178B2 (en)2002-04-302005-12-20Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for selecting an optimal electrode configuration of a medical electrical lead having a multiple electrode array
US7062327B2 (en)2002-05-022006-06-13Pacesetter, Inc.Method and apparatus for providing atrial autocapture in a dynamic atrial overdrive pacing system for use in an implantable cardiac stimulation device
US6881192B1 (en)2002-06-122005-04-19Pacesetter, Inc.Measurement of sleep apnea duration and evaluation of response therapies using duration metrics
US7117036B2 (en)2002-06-272006-10-03Pacesetter, Inc.Using activity-based rest disturbance as a metric of sleep apnea
US6925330B2 (en)2002-07-102005-08-02Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable medical device and method for detecting cardiac events without using of refractory or blanking periods
US6950702B2 (en)2002-07-152005-09-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Use of curvature based features for beat detection
WO2004026398A1 (en)2002-09-192004-04-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Apparatus and method for capture verification and threshold determination
US7738959B2 (en)2002-09-302010-06-15Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for performing stimulation threshold searches
US7203543B2 (en)2002-10-232007-04-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for detecting capture using a coronary vein electrode
US7085599B2 (en)2002-10-232006-08-01Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Characterization of supraventricular rhythm using collected cardiac beats
US7027871B2 (en)2002-10-312006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.Aggregation of data from external data sources within an implantable medical device
US7359749B2 (en)2002-11-142008-04-15Ela Medical S.A.S.Device for analysis of a signal, in particular a physiological signal such as an ECG signal
US7308311B2 (en)2002-11-222007-12-11Pacesetter, Inc.Physician programmer system with telemetered sensor waveform
US20040116978A1 (en)2002-12-062004-06-17Kerry BradleyMethod for determining stimulation parameters
US6884218B2 (en)2002-12-092005-04-26Charles W. OlsonThree dimensional vector cardiograph and method for detecting and monitoring ischemic events
US6961613B2 (en)2002-12-162005-11-01St. Jude Medical AbImplantable bi-ventricular stimulation device and system, and bi-ventricular stimulation and sensing method
US7203542B2 (en)2002-12-162007-04-10St. Jude Medical AbImplantable biventricular cardiac stimulator with capture monitoring by IECG analysis
US6993379B1 (en)2002-12-302006-01-31Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for emulating a surface EKG using an implantable cardiac stimulation device
US20040127950A1 (en)2002-12-312004-07-01Jaeho KimCapture verification using an evoked response reference
US7191004B2 (en)2002-12-312007-03-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Capture verification using an evoked response reference
US7031773B1 (en)2003-01-102006-04-18Pacesetter, Inc.Implantable cardiac stimulation system providing autocapture and lead impedance assessment and method
US7025730B2 (en)2003-01-102006-04-11Medtronic, Inc.System and method for automatically monitoring and delivering therapy for sleep-related disordered breathing
US7438686B2 (en)2003-01-102008-10-21Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus and method for monitoring for disordered breathing
US7160252B2 (en)2003-01-102007-01-09Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for detecting respiratory disturbances
US7103404B2 (en)2003-02-272006-09-05Medtronic,Inc.Detection of tachyarrhythmia termination
US20040172065A1 (en)2003-02-282004-09-02Sih Haris J.Cardiac therapy triggered by capture verification
US6973350B1 (en)2003-03-312005-12-06Pacesetter, Inc.Diagnosis of atrial fusion, atrial pseudofusion and/or native atrial activity
US7079988B2 (en)2003-04-012006-07-18ThalesMethod for the higher-order blind identification of mixtures of sources
US20040230229A1 (en)2003-04-112004-11-18Lovett Eric G.Hybrid transthoracic/intrathoracic cardiac stimulation devices and methods
WO2004091720A2 (en)2003-04-112004-10-28Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Subcutaneous cardiac device
US7236819B2 (en)2003-04-112007-06-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Separation of a subcutaneous cardiac signal from a plurality of composite signals
US7155278B2 (en)2003-04-212006-12-26Medtronic, Inc.Neurostimulation to treat effects of sleep apnea
US7369889B2 (en)2003-04-242008-05-06St. Jude Medical AbApparatus for analyzing cardiac events
US20040215253A1 (en)2003-04-242004-10-28Weinberg Lisa P.Implantable cardiac stimulation device providing atrial accelerated arrhythmia termination electrode configuration selection and method
US20040215277A1 (en)2003-04-252004-10-28Peter OosterhoffDynamic pacing interval extension for detection of intrinsic ventricular activity
US20050004612A1 (en)2003-04-252005-01-06Medtronic, Inc.Form analysis to detect evoked response
US7107093B2 (en)2003-04-292006-09-12Medtronic, Inc.Use of activation and recovery times and dispersions to monitor heart failure status and arrhythmia risk
US7477932B2 (en)2003-05-282009-01-13Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac waveform template creation, maintenance and use
US20040243014A1 (en)2003-05-282004-12-02Kent LeeCardiac waveform template creation, maintenance and use
US7129935B2 (en)2003-06-022006-10-31Synaptics IncorporatedSensor patterns for a capacitive sensing apparatus
US7248921B2 (en)2003-06-022007-07-24Cameron Health, Inc.Method and devices for performing cardiac waveform appraisal
US20040260351A1 (en)2003-06-232004-12-23Nils HolmstromEvoked response detector
US20050038478A1 (en)2003-08-112005-02-17Klepfer Ruth N.Activation recovery interval for classification of cardiac beats in an implanted device
US20050043652A1 (en)2003-08-182005-02-24Lovett Eric G. Sleep state classification
US7065400B2 (en)2003-08-202006-06-20Pacesetter, Inc.Method and apparatus for automatically programming CRT devices
US7617002B2 (en)2003-09-152009-11-10Medtronic, Inc.Selection of neurostimulator parameter configurations using decision trees
US7468040B2 (en)2003-09-182008-12-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for implantably monitoring external breathing therapy
US20050113710A1 (en)2003-09-182005-05-26Stahmann Jeffrey E.Implantable device employing movement sensing for detecting sleep-related disorders
US20050065587A1 (en)2003-09-242005-03-24Mark GryzwaImplantable lead with magnetic jacket
US7115097B2 (en)2003-10-092006-10-03Johnson Joseph LPositive airway pressure notification system for treatment of breathing disorders during sleep
US20050085865A1 (en)2003-10-152005-04-21Tehrani Amir J.Breathing disorder detection and therapy delivery device and method
US20050107839A1 (en)2003-11-132005-05-19Sanders Richard S.Implantable cardiac monitor upgradeable to pacemaker or cardiac resynchronization device
US7684861B2 (en)2003-11-132010-03-23Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable cardiac monitor upgradeable to pacemaker or cardiac resynchronization device
US20070142741A1 (en)2003-11-262007-06-21Michael Berthon-JonesMacro-control of treatment for sleep disordered breathing
US7242978B2 (en)2003-12-032007-07-10Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for generating a template for arrhythmia detection and electrogram morphology classification
WO2005058412A2 (en)2003-12-112005-06-30Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using multiple classification windows
US7319900B2 (en)2003-12-112008-01-15Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using multiple classification windows
US20080275522A1 (en)2003-12-112008-11-06Yanting DongNon-captured intrinsic discrimination in cardiac pacing response classification
US7184835B2 (en)2003-12-122007-02-27Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus for adjustable AVD programming using a table
US20050131477A1 (en)2003-12-122005-06-16Meyer Scott A.Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US7774064B2 (en)2003-12-122010-08-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US20050131478A1 (en)2003-12-122005-06-16Jaeho KimCardiac response classification using multisite sensing and pacing
US7123960B2 (en)2003-12-222006-10-17Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for delivering cardiac resynchronization therapy with variable atrio-ventricular delay
US7203540B2 (en)2003-12-222007-04-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for setting cardiac resynchronization therapy parameters
US7194313B2 (en)2003-12-242007-03-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Baroreflex therapy for disordered breathing
US7277754B2 (en)2003-12-242007-10-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and system for removing pacing artifacts from subcutaneous electrocardiograms
US7225021B1 (en)2004-01-302007-05-29Pacesetter, Inc.Differentiation of central sleep apnea and obstructive sleep apnea using an implantable cardiac device
US7094207B1 (en)2004-03-022006-08-22Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for diagnosing and tracking congestive heart failure based on the periodicity of cheyne-stokes respiration using an implantable medical device
US7299086B2 (en)2004-03-052007-11-20Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Wireless ECG in implantable devices
WO2005089865A1 (en)2004-03-172005-09-29Medtronic, Inc.Apparatus and methods of energy efficient, atrial-based bi-ventricular fusion-pacing
US7179229B1 (en)2004-04-072007-02-20Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for apnea detection using blood pressure detected via an implantable medical system
US20050288600A1 (en)2004-06-242005-12-29Yi ZhangAutomatic orientation determination for ECG measurements using multiple electrodes
EP1629863A1 (en)2004-08-272006-03-01Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for determining optimal atrioventricular delay based on intrinsic conduction delays
US7248925B2 (en)2004-08-272007-07-24Pacesetter, Inc.System and method for determining optimal atrioventricular delay based on intrinsic conduction delays
US7647108B2 (en)2004-09-302010-01-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Methods and systems for selection of cardiac pacing electrode configurations
US20060069322A1 (en)2004-09-302006-03-30Yi ZhangCardiac activation sequence monitoring and tracking
US20060074331A1 (en)2004-09-302006-04-06Jaeho KimArrhythmia classification and therapy selection
US7426412B1 (en)2004-10-132008-09-16Pacesetter, Inc.Evoked potential and impedance based determination of diaphragmatic stimulation
US7228173B2 (en)2004-11-232007-06-05Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac tachyarrhythmia therapy selection based on patient response information
US20060111747A1 (en)2004-11-232006-05-25Cazares Shelley MCardiac template generation based on patient response information
US20060116593A1 (en)2004-11-302006-06-01Yi ZhangCardiac activation sequence monitoring for ischemia detection
US20060129196A1 (en)2004-12-132006-06-15Yanting DongCapture verification with intrinsic response discrimination
US7734347B2 (en)2004-12-152010-06-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac pacing response classification based on waveform feature variability
WO2006065707A2 (en)2004-12-152006-06-22Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac capture verification and retrograde management
US7587240B2 (en)2004-12-152009-09-08Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Atrial capture verification
US20060129194A1 (en)2004-12-152006-06-15Geng ZhangCardiac pacing response classification using an adaptable classification interval
US7330761B2 (en)2004-12-152008-02-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Baseline adaptation for cardiac pacing response classification
US20060129199A1 (en)2004-12-152006-06-15Geng ZhangAtrial retrograde management
US20060129193A1 (en)2004-12-152006-06-15Geng ZhangTemplate initialization for evoked response detection
US7233821B2 (en)2005-03-312007-06-19Medtronic, Inc.Method and apparatus for evaluating ventricular performance during isovolumic contraction
US20080300644A1 (en)2005-04-262008-12-04Sathaye Alok SMethod for reducing phrenic nerve stimulation
US20080294215A1 (en)2005-04-262008-11-27Sathaye Alok SImplantable cardiac device for reduced phrenic nerve stimulation
US7392086B2 (en)2005-04-262008-06-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Implantable cardiac device and method for reduced phrenic nerve stimulation
US20060247695A1 (en)2005-04-282006-11-02Stalsberg Kevin JMethods and systems for managing fusion and noise in cardiac pacing response classification
US20060247693A1 (en)2005-04-282006-11-02Yanting DongNon-captured intrinsic discrimination in cardiac pacing response classification
US7337000B2 (en)2005-04-282008-02-26Cardiac Pacemakers Inc.Selection of cardiac signal features detected in multiple classification intervals for cardiac pacing response classification
US7499751B2 (en)2005-04-282009-03-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac signal template generation using waveform clustering
US7509170B2 (en)2005-05-092009-03-24Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Automatic capture verification using electrocardiograms sensed from multiple implanted electrodes
US7457664B2 (en)2005-05-092008-11-25Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Closed loop cardiac resynchronization therapy using cardiac activation sequence information
US20060253043A1 (en)2005-05-092006-11-09Yi ZhangPosture monitoring using cardiac activation sequences
US20060253044A1 (en)2005-05-092006-11-09Yi ZhangArrhythmia discrimination using electrocardiograms sensed from multiple implanted electrodes
US20070049974A1 (en)2005-08-232007-03-01Dan LiAutomatic multi-level therapy based on morphologic organization of an arrhythmia
US20070055124A1 (en)2005-09-012007-03-08Viswanathan Raju RMethod and system for optimizing left-heart lead placement
US20070142737A1 (en)2005-12-202007-06-21Shelley CazaresArrhythmia discrimination based on determination of rate dependency
WO2007087025A1 (en)2006-01-252007-08-02Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac resynchronization therapy parameter optimization
US20090030470A1 (en)2006-01-262009-01-29Nils HolmstromImplantable heart stimulation device with remedial response to anodal capture
US20070239057A1 (en)2006-03-292007-10-11Yanchuan PuPeriodic disordered breathing detection
US20070255321A1 (en)2006-04-282007-11-01Medtronic, Inc.Efficacy visualization
US20080009909A1 (en)2006-06-292008-01-10Sathaye Alok SLocal and non-local sensing for cardiac pacing
US20080004665A1 (en)2006-06-292008-01-03Mccabe Aaron RDetermination of cardiac pacing parameters based on non-localized sensing
WO2008005270A2 (en)2006-06-292008-01-10Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Local and non-local sensing for cardiac pacing
US7680536B2 (en)2006-08-172010-03-16Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Capture threshold estimation for alternate pacing vectors
US20080045851A1 (en)2006-08-182008-02-21Shelley Marie CazaresMethods and devices for determination of arrhythmia rate zone thresholds
US20080071318A1 (en)2006-09-142008-03-20Brooke M JasonTherapeutic electrical stimulation that avoids undesirable activation
US20090043351A1 (en)2007-08-072009-02-12Sathaye Alok SMethod and apparatus to perform electrode combination selection
US20090043352A1 (en)2007-08-072009-02-12Brooke M JasonMethod and apparatus to perform electrode combination selection
WO2009020639A1 (en)2007-08-072009-02-12Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Method and apparatus to perform electrode combination selection

Non-Patent Citations (49)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
"U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 312 Amendment filed Jun. 9, 2010", 4 pgs.
"U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, Preliminary Amendment filed Apr. 6, 2004", 12 pgs.
"U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, PTO Response to Rule 312 Communication dated Jul. 15, 2010", 2 pgs.
Acar et al., "SVD-based on-line exercise ECG signal orthogonalization", IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, vol. 46, No. 3, Mar. 1999. Abstract only.
Ajilore et al., Nightcap: Laboratory and home-based evaluation of a portable sleep monitor, 32 Psychophysiology, 32-98 (1995). Abstract only.
Belouchrani et al., "Blind Source Separation Based on Time-Frequency Signal Representations", IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, vol. 46, No. 11, pp. 2888-2897, Nov. 1998.
Cohen et al. Capture Management Efficacy in children and young adults with endocardial and unipolar epicardial systems. Europace, vol. 6, pp. 248-255 (2004).
Comon,"Independent component analysis, A new concept?", Signal Processing, vol. 36, No. 3, pp. 287-314, Apr. 1994.
Examiner Interview dated Dec. 8, 2009 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 3 pages.
Examiner Interview dated Mar. 6, 2008 from U.S. Appl. No. 11/116,558, 3 pages.
Examiner Interview dated May 28, 2008 from U.S. Appl. No. 11/116,558, 3 pages.
File History for U.S. Appl. No. 12/217,652.
Gallois et al., "Multi-Channel Analysis of the EEG Signals and Statistic Particularities for Epileptic Seizure Forecast", Second Joint EMBS/BMES Conference, pp. 208-215 (Oct. 23-26, 2002).
Gradaus et al., "Nonthoracotomy Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator Placement in Children: Use of a Subcutaneous Array Leads and Abdominally Placed Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators in Children", Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology, vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 356-360, Mar. 2001.
Hartz et al., "New Approach to Defibrillator Insertion", Journal of Thoracic Cardiovascular Surgery, vol. 97, pp. 920-922, 1989.
Hyvärinen et al., "Independent Component Analysis: A Tutorial", Helsinski University of Technology, Apr. 1999.
Interview Summary dated Sep. 18, 2009 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 2 pages.
Kolettis et al., "Submammary Implantation of a Cardioverter-Defibrillator with a Nonthoractomy Lead System", American Heart Journal, vol. 126, pp. 1222-1223, Nov. 1993.
Krahn et al. "Recurrent syncope. Experience with an implantable loop record", Cardiol. Clin., vol. 15(2), pp. 316-326, May 1997.
Leng et al., "Lead Configuration for Defibrillator Implantation in a Patient with Congenital Heart Disease and a Mechanical Prosthetic Tricuspid Valve", PACE, vol. 24, No. 8, pp. 1291-1292, Aug. 2001.
Notice of Allowance dated Mar. 19, 2010 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 4 pages.
Office Action dated Dec. 6, 2007 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 9 pages.
Office Action dated Feb. 7, 2006 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 16 pages.
Office Action dated Mar. 18, 2009 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 10 pages.
Office Action dated Mar. 28, 2007 from U.S. Appl. No. 11/116,558, 14 pages.
Office Action dated Sep. 21, 2006 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 7 pages.
Office Action dated Sep. 21, 2009 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 8 pages.
Office Action Response dated Dec. 21, 2009 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 14 pages.
Office Action Response dated Feb. 6, 2008 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 16 pages.
Office Action Response dated Jan. 22, 2007 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 16 pages.
Office Action Response dated Jun. 5, 2006 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 20 pages.
Office Action Response dated Jun. 9, 2009 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 14 pages.
Office Action Response dated May 6, 2008 from U.S. Appl. No. 11/116,558, 11 pages.
Office Action Response dated Oct. 29, 2007 from U.S. Appl. No. 11/116,558, 7 pages.
Office Action Response dated Sep. 22, 2008 from U.S. Appl. No. 10/734,599, 16 pages.
Office Action Response dated Sep. 28, 2007 from U.S. Appl. No. 11/116,558, 15 pages.
Park et al., "Use of an Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator in an Eight-Month-Old Infant with Ventricular Fibrillation Arising from a Myocardial Fibroma", PACE, vol. 22, No. 1, pp. 138-139, Jan. 1999.
Rieta, et al., "Atrial Activity Extraction Based on Blind Source Separation as an Alternative to QRST Cancellation for Atrial Fibrillation Analysis", Computers in Cardiology, vol. 27, pp. 69-72, 2000.
Schuder et al., "Experimental Ventricular Defibrillation with an Automatic and Completely Implanted System", Trans. American Society Artif. Int. Organs, vol. 16, pp. 207-212, 1970.
Schuder et al., "Transthoracic Ventricular Defibrillation in the Dog with Truncated and Untruncated Exponential Stimuli", IEEE Transitions on Bio-Medical Engineering, vol. BME-18, No. 6, pp. 410-415, Nov. 1971.
Schuder et al., "Ventricular Defibrillation in the Dog Using Implanted and Partially Implanted Electrode Systems", American Journal of Cardiology, vol. 33, pp. 243-247, Feb. 1974.
Smits et al., Defibrillation Threshold (DFT) Model of a Fully Subcutaneous ICD System, Europace Supplements, vol. 2, Jun. 2001 at col. 778, p. B83.
Splett et al., Detemrination of Pacing Capture in Implantable Defibrillators Benefit of Evoked Response Detection Using RV Coil to Can Vector, PACE, vol. 23, pp. 1645-1650.
Stirbis et al., "Optimizing of the Shape of Implanted Artificial Pacemakers", Kaunas Medical Institute, Translated from Meditsinskaya Tekhnika, No. 6, pp. 25-27, 1986.
Verrier et al., Sleep Related Cardiovascular Risk: New Home-Based Monitoring Technology for Improved Diagnosis and Therapy, 2 A.N.E. 158-175 (1997).
Verrier et al., Sleep, dreams, and sudden death: the case for sleep as an autonomic stress test for the heart, 31 Cardiovascular Research 181-211 (1996).
Waldemark et al., Detection of Apnea using Short Window FFT Technique and Artificial Neural Network, 3390 SPIE International Society for Optical Engineering 122-133 (1998). (partial article).
Zarzoso et al., "Blind Separation of Independent Sources for Virtually Any Source Probability Density Function", IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, vol. 47, No. 9, pp. 2419-2432, Sep. 1999.
Zarzoso et al., "Noninvasive Fetal Electrocardiogram Extraction: Blind Separation Versus Adaptive Noise Cancellation", IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, vol. 48, No. 1, pp. 12-18, Jan. 2001.

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US20180249963A1 (en)*2003-12-122018-09-06Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US10898142B2 (en)*2003-12-122021-01-26Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US20220062645A1 (en)*2020-08-312022-03-03Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device with pacing capture classification
US12324920B2 (en)*2020-08-312025-06-10Medtronic, Inc.Implantable medical device with pacing capture classification

Also Published As

Publication numberPublication date
US10898142B2 (en)2021-01-26
US20180249963A1 (en)2018-09-06
US20100256703A1 (en)2010-10-07
US7774064B2 (en)2010-08-10
US20050131477A1 (en)2005-06-16

Similar Documents

PublicationPublication DateTitle
US10898142B2 (en)Cardiac response classification using retriggerable classification windows
US7319900B2 (en)Cardiac response classification using multiple classification windows
US8290591B2 (en)Methods and systems for managing fusion and noise in cardiac pacing response classification
US9308375B2 (en)Cardiac response classification using multisite sensing and pacing
US7761162B2 (en)Capture verification with intrinsic response discrimination
US8145310B2 (en)Non-captured intrinsic discrimination in cardiac pacing response classification
US7499751B2 (en)Cardiac signal template generation using waveform clustering
US7908006B2 (en)Cardiac pacing response classification using an adaptable classification interval
US7529578B2 (en)Multi channel approach to capture verification
EP2404639B1 (en)Cardiac capture verification and retrograde management
US8145296B2 (en)Adaptive windowing for cardiac waveform discrimination
US7734347B2 (en)Cardiac pacing response classification based on waveform feature variability

Legal Events

DateCodeTitleDescription
STCFInformation on status: patent grant

Free format text:PATENTED CASE

MAFPMaintenance fee payment

Free format text:PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1551); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

Year of fee payment:4


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp